“Laws are like sausages, it is better not to see them being
made” is a quip regularly and mistakenly attributed to Otto von Bismarck, the
famous Prussian statesman and architect of German unification. However, the
Iron Chancellor, who died in 1898, was not associated with the quote until the
1930s. In fact it was the American lawyer-poet, John Godfrey Saxe, otherwise
famous for publicizing the ancient Indian parable about Blind Men of Hindustan
and The Elephant, who more inelegantly said: "Laws, like sausages, cease
to inspire respect in proportion as we know how they are made."
As I write this, oral judgements have been completed at the
Supreme Court hearing of Raila Odinga and Kalonzo Musyoka’s petition against
the re-election of President Uhuru Kenyatta. It has been 4 days of riveting
presentation, argument and often, comedy, as one side prosecuted its case and
the other tried to rubbish it. The main bone of contention appears to be about means
and ends: whether the way the election was carried out matters or we should
only concern ourselves with whether the results declared matched how the
electors had voted.
In a sense, it could be said that President Kenyatta and the
Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) appear to prefer the
Bismarckian formulation that it is better to focus on the final product and not
peer too closely at the inner workings of the electoral system. After all, they
argue, the whole point of an election is to express the sovereign will of the
voters. So, a simple check of the forms prepared at the polling stations (where
all the voting and counting happened) should suffice.
The petitioners on the other hand, are more in line with
Saxe. They say that the more we actually learn about how the election was run,
the less reason we will have to respect the result. They point out numerous
irregularities and outright illegalities in the conduct of the poll which they
hold undermine any confidence, not only in the veracity of the announced result,
but also in the authenticity of whatever documents the IEBC might produce to
support it.
I have been somewhat mystified by the way in which these
arguments were framed. Throughout, voters have been portrayed as passive actors
upon whom elections are visited. The lawyers in the room, including the
Attorney-General, behaved very like the blind men of Hindustan trying to define
the elephant that is the people’s sovereignty. There seemed little recognition
that sovereignty does not start and end with the casting of ballots and
determining of who becomes President. Citizens do not become sovereign when
they transmogrify into voters. They are always sovereign in a democracy.
Further, as I have written before, voting in an election is
not – as one of the lawyers unfortunately declared – the foundation of
democracy. How much ordinary citizens can contribute to everyday political
decision-making and their ability to hold public officials to account are the
true measures of democracy. Thus, if elections are about the sovereignty of the
voter, as another averred, then constitutions are about the citizen. And the
entire corpus of law, the foundation of which should be the constitution and
citizen participation in governance, is an exercise in sovereignty.
Protecting the expression of sovereignty therefore entails
more than singularly ensuring the correct result was announced. It also means
ensuring that the process prescribed by the law was adhered to. It is not a
choice between respecting one or the other.
Now, after dominating TV screens for nearly a week, the
process of adjudicating the petition moves into the shadows as the judges
retire to consider their verdict. Four years ago, after a similar week of TV
drama, they reappeared with a sausage of a judgement, with only a short summary
of the decisions delivered in open court but eventually revealed to consist of
a messy and unhealthy cocktail of poorly-reasoned arguments.
It is proper that the judges should concern themselves with burdens
and standards of proof and with the attendant requirements of who should prove
what to which degree of satisfaction. In exercising its delegated sovereignty,
the court is subject to the constraints of evidence. What is true and what can
be proven not necessarily being the same thing, courts only concern themselves
with the latter.
The upshot of this is that the court cannot tell us whether
the election was stolen, just whether Raila and Kalonzo can prove it. That
means, regardless of what the courts rule, it will still be up to each citizen
to decide for himself or herself whether they believe the election was credible
and whether the IEBC and other arms of government have properly carried out the
mandates given to them.
Still, this does not mean the Supreme Court’s judgement is
irrelevant or unimportant. It will decide the legal validity, if not exactly
the legitimacy, of the poll and the government it births. It is hoped that the
judges will each prepare individual judgements, clearly detailing the reasons
for the conclusions they have come to and that each will get to read his or her
judgement in open court. The truth is, elections and court judgments should be
nothing like sausages. The more one knows how they were made, the more they
should command respect and be savored.