Across nations, a deeply entrenched, destructive pattern continues to plague public governance: key leadership and senior positions are consistently awarded not to the most qualified, experienced candidates, but to partisan loyalists rewarded first and foremost for their unwavering allegiance to ruling political power. This long-standing, stubborn practice inflicts lasting damage on public institutions and imposes steep, widespread costs on society as a whole.
What often begins as a seemingly harmless gesture of gratitude—a senior role or lucrative position handed out to a faithful party supporter—quickly snowballs into systemic dysfunction when the appointee lacks the necessary professional expertise and hands-on experience for the role. The ripple effects of these unqualified appointments stretch far beyond individual government departments: widespread administrative inefficiency, stalled public projects, and all too often, overt corruption and widespread mismanagement become the new norm.
The recent scandal at Canawaima Management Company, where the entire board of commissioners was replaced after just a few months of chaotic leadership, followed by revelations of excessive negotiation payments to the union chair, is far from an isolated incident. In fact, conflicts of interest have become the rule rather than the exception in political patronage appointments, when loyalty is prioritized over proven competence.
When unqualified individuals hold critical decision-making positions, policy choices are shaped not by evidence and public need, but by narrow political interests. Public projects fall behind schedule, public funds are misallocated or wasted, and the quality of services delivered to ordinary citizens declines sharply. This pattern breeds widespread public frustration and erodes trust in government: how can citizens be expected to trust a system that hands power to politically compliant individuals instead of the most capable candidates?
Real-world outcomes repeatedly confirm this damaging trend. Whether the roles in question are senior leadership in government agencies, regulatory oversight positions, or board seats at state-owned public organizations, proven expertise is too often traded away for partisan loyalty. Even at the national civil aviation authority, a core agency responsible for the safety of air travel, unqualified leadership has undermined both service quality and public safety. This is not merely an internal administrative issue—it carries severe, tangible consequences for all of society. Unqualified leaders are far more vulnerable to external manipulation and far more likely to make costly, harmful decisions that put the public at risk.
It is long past time to break this toxic political culture. All public sector appointments must be rooted in the principles of meritocracy: professional knowledge, proven experience, and unwavering integrity should be the only criteria for selection. Only through this shift can nations build strong, accountable public institutions that prioritize the public good and earn back the trust of citizens. Unfortunately, the same damaging pattern of patronage reappears with every change of government, perpetuating the cycle of dysfunction.
Society deserves public leaders who are selected not just for their partisan alignment, but for their proven professional competence. At the end of the day, every member of society pays the price for unqualified governance: through higher costs, compromised public safety, and the permanent erosion of trust in democratic institutions.
Reversing this decades-long trend requires bold political courage and a deep commitment to public accountability, to build a fairer, more effective system where competence is the deciding factor in all public appointments. Only then can nations build a future where the public good is truly placed at the center of governance.
