ROAR of Ravi Dev
Over the last year and a half, and especially during the post NCM maneuvers and elections hijinks, many commentators have either marveled or bemoaned David Grangerβs scant regard for the constitution (the NCM) or for democratic institutions like elections (SOPβs). Constitutions, of course, are supposed to authoritatively allocate power in a state and elections are supposed to confer authority to a party or coalition to direct the affairs of state as the government for a specified period.
To understand Grangerβs seeming βidiosyncrasyβ as some put it when he interpreted the constitution as he saw fit, and the unctuous homilies he utters while his myrmidons rape the electoral apparatus to βgive David another five yearsβ, we have to dissect his conception of political power. More specifically, we have to understand his mentorβs Burnhamβs conception, since this was directly transmitted to him as the disseminator of the latterβs political philosophy to the armed forces.
Burnham was very open about his political philosophy for action: Machiavelliβs βthe Princeβ, was his Bible. Machiavelliβs teachings have scandalized society ever since he proposed them in the 16th century. He rejected the still prevalent moralistic view that rulers (today, βpoliticiansβ) must behave in accordance to ethical norms and earn the authority to rule because of their βvirtuous livesβ. Today, they would be chosen in elections.
Machiavelli insisted that there is no moral basis for judging between legitimate and illegitimate uses of power and politicians must focus totally on getting and keeping power. By any means necessary. Burnham accepted the centrality of power and is famously quoted as saying: βPolitics is all about power and any politician who says otherwise is either a fool or lying.β Machiavelli, as Burnham did in practice, gave short shrift to legalities, since they concluded these depend of force for their application. It is better to concentrate on force as the basis of power.
And it is for this reason that Burnham built up the armed forces in Guyana to the highest ratio per civilian in the world: Granger has single-mindedly followed suit. The Police and GDF have been boosted to their highest strength, while the Peopleβs Militia and the Cadet Corps have been resuscitated and are at full strength. In the debate between guns and sugar, with the Machiavellian Granger, the guns of course, won out.
In the case of Granger and Burnham, historical circumstances conspired to give them power resources far beyond the unchallenged armed forces. There is the bureaucracy, which, like the Police Force, has been dominated by βkith and kinβ for more than a century. Newer state institutions like GECOM, which is supposed to be βautonomousβ, also suffer from the same proclivity. Most crucially, Granger also possesses βdisruptive powerβ: controlling the potential or likelihood of particular groups looting, burning and committing general mayhem. This is why businesses are presently boarded up in Georgetown.
Power has two major attributes β resources and their mobilization. From the above, we can see that the resources at the disposal of a PNC leader β especially with one having his Machiavellian conception of power β would see himself in a very dominant position with other competitors for power, who depend on legitimacy through the ballot box for their authority. The latter, in any case would be very tenuous since it can be challenged at any time β as the PPP was post-1997.
Mobilization capabilities include the groupβs morale, motivation, cohesiveness and strategic ability to cope with new situations. All of these of course are summarized by the word βleadershipβ. Since he took over the helm of the PNC in 2011, Granger has focused on demonizing the PPP in the eyes of his constituency and has succeeded wildly in mobilizing his constituency. He has also used Machiavelliβs advice that the leader must be hypocritical and present himself as a person with the highest moral values. Hence the frequent pictures of Granger kneeling and praying in Church, etc.
Machiavelli advised that what we call βcognitive dissonanceβ today, would not bother the hypocritical leaderβs followers. Today, they blindly follow Granger as βhonest, decent and suffused with integrityβ, even as he oversaw the most blatant rigging of elections in the history of Guyana. And thatβs saying a lot.
Granger the Machiavellian knows if he hadnβt rigged, the PPP would get in. He therefore loses nothing by βtrying a thingβ: he at least stands a chance of clinging on with the backing of his power resources. The recount is just another ploy.

































































