One of the most misunderstood quotes in all of civil-military relations is that war is politics by other means. I was reminded of it as folks were tweeting today about the current mess in Ottawa having political and policing dynamics as if policing is not inherently political.
Politics is a term to describe pretty much anything where the decisions are being made that affect the public. Sure, politicians do politics all the time as they try to make decisions that will allocate, redistribute, regulate, etc. But other actors also do politics, and, of the various actors in any place, the police are among the most political.
There is no private space for policing--everything they do involves the public. And there is a heap of decision-making because they have finite resources, time, and energy, so they are constantly having to make decisions about which laws to enforce, what constitutes a sufficiently egregious violation to warrant attention, whom to watch, whom to stop, etc. As someone who speeds much of the time, I am very well aware that the cops don't enforce the speed limit at exactly one mile or kilometer/hr over the speed limit. We tend not to think that much about the politics of speed limits except when photo radar gets proposed that would reduce the discretion of the speed-trap monitor. But when photo radar is brought up, the politics does not end since the question remains--where to install it?
Of course, I can speed because I am a white dude. I don't fear a traffic stop like people of color do, as my death or beating is not a likely outcome of such an encounter. This gets us to the deeply political nature of policing as police don't treat every person the same. There is much politics involved in who gets policed. Stop and frisk everyone? Nope, mostly people of color. The current crisis in Canada, which has angered heaps of white folks, shows that policing is political as the white supremacists, far right extremists have faced far less policing than the average Indigenous demonstration. There have been plenty of pictures and videos showing cops being pretty damned friendly with those holding Ottawa hostage. So, who gets policed is up to the discretion of the cops, and they have used this discretion in ways that have deeply challenged public order.
For the past few years, it has been abundantly clear that the cops in North America have been out of control--that they have used their discretion as they see fit, treating far right folks with kid gloves and brutally beating those people who have the temerity to protest police brutality. When mayors and city councils have tried to regulate them, when authorities have required mask and vax mandates, police unions have pushed back, just as they push back against any accountability for police brutality. If that were not problematic enough, the way things seem to work in Canada is that the politicians don't think that they have the power to direct the police. So, the cops are even more autonomous, even as they make decisions with bigger and bigger political consequences. The Mayor of Ottawa talked about the failures of policing using the passive voice today, as if he didn't have any role in this.
I see people of color online noting that the white folks seem to be surprised that the cops are out of control, that they police selectively, and their selectivity often seems to favor white supremacists. They know it has always been thus, but that white folks didn't really understand it in Ottawa, anyway, until now. So, no, this is not really news. I have long assumed that the cops here were out of control--what I did not know is that the politicians thought that this was normal and acceptable.
Maybe that will change now. Or maybe the citizens will have to do what the cops refuse to do. I am writing this as my colleagues and friends have joined counter-protests that are keeping the extremists from reinforcing downtown with yet more assholes. When told by the cops to move aside, that the cops will handle it, the crowds scoffed and remained in place. Because, of course, they have no reason to believe the cops.
There are several unanswered questions but two come to mind:
- Will any politicians pay a price in the next election for screwing this up?
- Will the police pay a price for their refusal to do their job?
If those who have failed us don't experience consequences, any chance to learn from this, to do better next time, evaporate. And that, too, will be political.
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