[HPforGrownups] Elections in the Wizarding World (or lack thereof)
Michelle Apostolides
michelleapostolides at yahoo.co.uk
Sat Jan 25 22:49:46 UTC 2003
No: HPFGUIDX 50622
Becky said :
What you said about selecting officials is probably true a lot of the time, but not, I think entirely. Look at the group who governs Hogswarts. They were able to expel Mr. Malfroy which is an inherently political task. They also suspended Dumbledore for a day or two and I'm sure could have selected a successor although that process is not actually spelled out in the book.
Me
Ok, this is where you need to define politics. I see those decisions as easy. They're about right or wrong. In fact, boards of governors of private schools in the UK ( I'm a Brit ) are quite autonomous.
Again, Becky :
Also in the first book, Hagrid told Harry concerning the Ministry of Magic that "they wanted Dumbledore fer Minister o' course, but he'd never leave Hogwarts, so old Cornelius Fudge got the job." Well, first "they wanted" sounds like a "political" and not a magical appointment. Also, no magical selection process would have stuck the ministry with an idiot like Fudge!
Me
Hmm.....now we're really talking semantics. I think you mean that his appointment was not done by democracy - as in a vote of some sort ? I don't think that the WW is so very primitive that they would trust their leadership to pure magic, because they are not ( in some respects ) so very far removed from UK society. By this I mean that they judge by personality, not wizarding ability.
Michelle
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