Source: Reuters
āThe one thing you can say about defeat,ā reflects Michael Ignatieff, currently a professor at both the University of Toronto and Harvard Universityās John F. Kennedy School of Government, āis that it earns you the right to speak well of a life which didnāt go so well for you.
āThere are uses for defeat and losing. Iāve tried to put loss to good and productive use, which IĀ hope makes my optimism credible. If IĀ can still believe in this game after what happened to me, IĀ hope other people will feel the same.ā
Ignatieff is speaking about his new book, Fire and Ashes: Success and Failure in Politics, which he hopes will give āpeople like me who were crazy enough to go into politics a real picture of what itās like but at the same time retain peopleās faith in the process, which IĀ came out believing in very stronglyā. People such as Russell Brand who argue that we should āgive up on democratic politicsā, he adds, are ājust wrongā.
A harsh political awakening
To get to that upbeat conclusion, Ignatieff has to survey the time he spent in Canadian politics, returning after 30 years of living in the UK and the US to become leader of the Liberal Party and then going on to suffer a severe defeat when he stood for prime minister in 2011.
Āé¶¹
The book is amusingly frank about some of the blunders he made: putting far too much stress on his own motives in a fundraising meeting with business people uninterested in ābankrolling my existential challengesā; initially ābelieving that every voter deserved a Socratic dialogue of many minutesā durationā when he was canvassing door to door; managing to alienate both Jewish and Muslim voters in his comments on the 2006 fighting between Israel and Lebanon; foolishly replacing his chief of staff.
He even acknowledges that, in some sense, he just didnāt get the nature of modern politics, where allegiances ācan change faster than a blink of an eyeā and his party became āan echo chamber: all we were hearing was the sound of our own voicesā¦IĀ had too literal an understanding of everything. IĀ thought IĀ was in an election. We were in a reality show. IĀ thought content mattered. IĀ thought the numbers in a platform should add up. Ours did and theirs didnāt. None of it mattered. It was a case of parallel universes.ā
Āé¶¹
His critics, of course, had a great deal more to say, pointing to a lack of ease with the glad-handing, baby-kissing side of politics, and one Guardian writer accusing him of being āan opportunist, if not a self-absorbed charlatanā. Central to the charge sheet, however, was the claim that it showed both naivety and arrogance to believe that he could return home after three decades away and expect voters to warm to him. Repeated attack ads by the incumbent Conservative Party reading āMichael Ignatieff: Just visitingā proved highly effective.
So how much would he now concede to his critics?
āIĀ would admit to hubris but not to arrogance,ā he responds. āAn arrogant person is unprepared to learn. IĀ was prepared to learn from my mistakes. Naive? Sure. IĀ think IĀ didnāt understand what IĀ was getting into.
āIĀ had spent nearly 20 years as a spectator of other peopleās politics, in England and the United States, and IĀ thought it was time to get out of the stands and on to the field. There was a certain risk-taking in that, which IĀ still speak for. IĀ would concede lots to my various critics, but they are still in the stands.ā
But could this be interpreted as a kind of academic arrogance, based on the assumption that all politicians are incompetent, shallow or corrupt ā and that he could do aĀ better job himself?
Āé¶¹
This is not how Ignatieff sees it. As someone āof the Jack Kennedy generationā, he notes that he āhad a rather romantic view of politicians. IĀ worked for and came to know a bit the most charismatic politician Canada has had in its history, Pierre Trudeau. IĀ had all the complicated feelings everybody has about politics, despair about how bad some of them are, but combined with a very romantic and even sentimental respect for the great ones. And IĀ still do.ā
Out of the ring
Now declaring himself ātotally done and dustedā as a practising politician, Ignatieff claims to be very happy āback in a classroom and writingā, trying to āteach politics to the next generationā. He has also gained āa lot of respect for the people who were doing it better than IĀ was, who had a sort of natural gift for it that IĀ didnātā¦IĀ understand the pressures on politicians much better. IĀ understand how you can get bent out of shape by the public glare. IĀ understand how messy the political process is, and how much unintended consequence, chance and timing play in things.ā
So how would his rather bruising experience influence what Ignatieff now wants to tell his students?
āIt sure changes the way you teach!ā he admits. āA lot of teaching is driven by āthe literatureā, āthe fieldā or āthe disciplineā, the state of academic debate on a particular controversy. All that is fine, but once youāve done politics you really feel you want to teach the problems and to be as realistic as you can about the political obstacles that lie in the way of solutions.
Āé¶¹
āAt the Kennedy School, IĀ spent a lot of time talking about ānormatively desirable outcomesā without thinking nearly hard enough with my students about how you get it done. Iām now much more interested in how we take an abstract normative goal and make it happen.
āOne of the things that is extremely challenging to my teaching now is the possibility that there are some things you can learn only from experience and canāt be taught. The pathos of teaching is that some things canāt be taught ā and one of them might be political judgement. IĀ donāt think thatās a despairing thought, but it does induce humility in a teacher and make the job much more interesting.ā
Āé¶¹
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Õ±į·”ās university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?




