Typos

The Magic Wand of the Aspiring Candidate

Published February 27, 2026, 09:19
The Magic Wand of the Aspiring Candidate

The Patriarch comments on the pre-election rhetoric of parliamentary candidates, noting their tendency to promise solutions to problems that exceed their authority. He particularly criticizes the ease with which candidates refer to the eradication of corruption, emphasizing that the role of a Member of Parliament is legislative and supervisory, not investigative or judicial. The author points out that MPs do not have the power to fight corruption in the way it is presented in pre-election rhetoric. Instead, they should focus on legislating measures to enhance transparency and control the executive branch. Similar criticism is leveled at promises to upgrade education, as the MP does not shape educational policy but can monitor and pressure the government for improvements. Substantial change in education requires administrative capacity and budget, not just simple pre-election promises. The Patriarch concludes that candidates should focus on what truly belongs to them: legislation, control, and accountability. Everything else is a pre-election performance paid for by the voter.