‘We call politics a game, but it isn’t one. There is no referee and the teams make up the rules as they go along. You can’t cry foul or offside in politics. Almost anything goes.’

Zsuzsanna and I returned to Stornoway and disconsolately packed up our things. I remembered a photograph I’d seen of men in overalls carting belongings into a moving van at the back of 10 Downing Street after Margaret Thatcher defeated James Callaghan in 1979.

The arrival of the moving van is as momentous a symbol of the sovereignty of the people as the moment when a leader takes the oath of office. Now the moving vans were at our back door. The people had told us to pack our bags.

In an emptying house that had once felt like home, I pulled my books off the library shelves as the portrait of Laurier, our greatest prime minister, seemed to follow me with its eyes. Every leader of the party but two had become prime minister. Now I had become the third leader to fail.

The day before I’d had an airplane, a security detail, a staff of 100, a car and driver, a chef and housekeeper to welcome us home, and, most valuable of all, a political future. The day after, that future had vanished. I was unemployed and five and half months short of eligibility for the pension that usually goes with six years of service as an MP.

I was filling boxes while making phone calls to find myself a job. Rob Prichard, a friend of 30 years, came to the rescue, and after he’d made a few calls to John Fraser, master of Massey College, David Naylor, the president of the University of Toronto, and Janice Gross Stein, director of the Munk School of Global Affairs, I was back in my old life, teaching human rights and politics once again. Finding a new start was much harder for many of my defeated colleagues.

‘Defeated, disconsolate, forlorn’

I hadn’t driven for five years, and so I went to renew my licence the day after the defeat. The photograph they took that day shows a person I now barely recognize: defeated, disconsolate and forlorn. The eyes — my eyes — don’t focus.

I cleared out the desk in my office on Parliament Hill and bade farewell to a shocked caucus, now reduced to less than half its size. It was terrible to commiserate with defeated colleagues, many of whom had been excellent, even self-sacrificing members of Parliament and who now, like me, were struggling to comprehend defeat. Some vowed to “get back,” but you could tell they did not believe it. Others took defeat calmly, as if admitting that this phase of their life was over.

But for the ones I used to call the “rink rats,” because they so loved being in the House, their grief at having to say goodbye to the chamber was painful to watch, especially since I felt responsible for their fate. The defeat still felt like an act of nature, a great storm that had knocked down all the trees in the forest. Most caucus colleagues commiserated with me on our common misfortune, while those who felt bitter kept silent. More than one came up and said I had fought a good campaign. There was little recrimination, because I had paid for my mistakes with the loss of my own seat.

Zsuzsanna came with me to the last caucus meeting, and when caucus noticed her sitting to one side, weeping with her head in her hands, they rose as one and gave her a standing ovation. She deserved it. No one had worked harder for our common cause. After that, I gave my last speech to caucus, thanked my friends, ignored my enemies and, hand in hand with Zsuzsanna, I strode out of Parliament for the last time.

‘Nothing so ex as an ex-politician’

In the weeks afterward, the solitary reality of defeat began to sink in. It turns out that there is nothing so ex as an ex-politician, especially a defeated one. Your phone goes dead. While I had been in office, ex-politicians refusing to accept their status had occasionally bedeviled my life, and I vowed that having been defeated, I would at least have the good taste not to foist commentary or criticism on my successor, whoever it might be. When you’re done in politics, you are well and truly done, and it is a good idea to accept this as quickly as you can. The voters had decided my fate. Now it was my task to accept their verdict and move on.

All this, of course, is easier said than done. As I battled the gloom that came over me, I understood — not immediately, of course, but over time — that the psychic challenge after defeat is to recover your standing. In my case, I had sacrificed my standing as a writer and thinker to enter politics, and now that I had been defeated, I had lost my standing as a politician. Defeat invalidated me as a politician but also as a writer and thinker. I was an embarrassment both to my former political colleagues and to my new ones at the university. I wondered whether I was much use to anybody.

This period of self-pity, I am happy to say, was brief, because defeat had a surprising aspect that I had never anticipated. For five years, I had lived in the public gaze, courting every eye, every glance in the hopes of getting their vote. I had turned myself into a state of complete dependency on the judgment of strangers. Now that they had decided my future, to my immense surprise, strangers came to my rescue. So many e-mails came into party headquarters thanking me for my years in office that the staff bound them in a thick book and presented them to me.

Everywhere I went, people came up and congratulated me like someone who’d survived an illness. Keep up the good work, many of them said. Great job, others shouted from the windows of passing cars. I think some of them mistook me for some contestant who had just been voted off a reality TV show, which, in a way, was true.

I’d always assumed that people would praise me on the way up and kick me on the way down, but that’s not what defeat was like. Heading out to pick up some dry cleaning a week after the election, back in our condo in Toronto, I passed the firemen lounging in front of the fire station next door, waiting for their next call, and they all gathered around and commiserated on my loss. Tough game, one said, and I said, no tougher than putting out fires. We all laughed.

In the dry cleaners opposite our apartment, Michelle, our friend from Vietnam who watches Korean videos on her iPad and never seems to charge us full price for our dry cleaning, came around the counter and gave me a hug. A Sikh truck driver waved brightly as he drove past in his cement mixer. These reactions confirmed me in the view that in politics, the politicians can be awful, the press unspeakable, but the people are actually all right. So many perfect strangers came up to tell me they’d voted for me that you could be forgiven for wondering why we’d lost.

Of course you take defeat personally. You mourn the life you will not get to lead. You mourn the things you will not get to do. I’d finally figured out whom I was doing politics for and now I wouldn’t have the chance to do anything for them at all. You grieve and then, as with all forms of grieving that I have gone through, life slowly comes to the rescue. It feels good to have time on your hands, good to be able to read a book again, good to go to a concert. Defeat brings lucidity and it also brings liberation. You get your freedom back when you least expect it. The most surprising reaction to failure is relief.

‘The great works of political theory’

I began reading again and with reading came the first stirring of the intellectual curiosity, the avidity for ideas that the routine of political life can slowly drive out of your system. Within three weeks of defeat, I started preparing my fall classes, and as I sat in my Massey College office I began thinking about the relation between political life as I had lived it and the great works of political theory that I would once again be teaching.

Naturally enough, I found myself thinking that much of the political theory that students are assigned in classes the world over was written not by those who succeeded in politics but by those who failed. Cicero’s On Duties and On Rhetoric, taught to students of politics for 2,000 years, were composed by a man who once wrote a friend, “I used to sit on the deck and hold the rudder of the state in my hands; now there’s scarcely room for me in the bilge.” The brilliant defender of the Roman republic who held the consul’s office was to meet his death at the hands of imperial assassins.

As for Machiavelli, another staple of politics classes for 500 years, he wrote The Prince and the Discourses only after he had been turfed out of office in 1512, thrown into jail, tortured and sent back to his estates to brood on rejection and defeat. I felt a deep kinship with him now as I read the wonderful letter to his friend Francesco Vettori in which he describes the days of a defeated politician, snaring birds on his estate, chopping wood in the forest, grousing with friends in the tavern and then returning at night to his library, donning the clothes he once wore at court and entering the vanished but consoling world of the Roman classics.

Another large figure in the canon of political theory, Edmund Burke, had to live with the criticism that he was never as good a politician as he was a thinker. He wrote Reflections on the Revolution in France in 1790, the most penetrating conservative critique of revolutionary ardour, but was ridiculed by the poet Oliver Goldsmith’s memorable barb about the politician:

Who, born for the Universe, narrow’d his mind,

And to party gave up, what was meant for mankind.

Tho’ fraught with all learning, kept straining his throat,

To persuade Tommy Townshend to lend him a vote.

James Madison co-wrote The Federalist Papers with Alexander Hamilton to secure public support for the ratification of the U.S. Constitution. It’s still the most successful and vivid political pamphlet in history, but Madison’s tenure as president was not exactly crowned with success. He became the only president to flee the White House and endured the sack of his capital city at the hands of the British in the War of 1812.

Alexis de Tocqueville, author of the greatest single observation of democracy as a culture of universal aspiration, Democracy in America, mouldered on the backbenches of the French parliament throughout the 1840s, writing bitterly about the idiotic speech-making of his fellow MPs. He rose briefly to ministerial office after the revolution of 1848, but in 1851 he retired from politics in disgust.

John Stuart Mill may have been the greatest theorist of representative government who ever lived, but as an MP in the British Parliament from 1865 to 1868, he chafed at the legislative incompetence of his fellow MPs and was defeated in his second election.

Max Weber, the German sociologist and aristocratic liberal, failed even to gain nomination as a candidate for the Democratic Party in 1919. As an activist, he knew humiliation and defeat. As a theorist, we still assign him to students every year.

Why theoretical acumen is so frequently combined with political failure throws light on what is distinctive about a talent for politics. The candour, rigour, willingness to follow a thought wherever it leads, the penetrating search for originality — all these are virtues in theoretical pursuits but active liabilities in politics, where discretion and dissimulation are essential for success. This would suggest that these theorists failed because they couldn’t keep their mouths shut when flattery or partisan discipline required it of them.

Equally, however, theorists may have lacked those supreme virtues that separate successful politicians from failures: adaptability, cunning, rapid-fire recognition of Fortuna, the keen intuition that a situation has changed and that what was true once is no longer so, together with the noble capacity to lead, to charm and to inspire.

Thinkers too often disparage men of action in ways that do them no credit. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes reportedly said of Franklin Roosevelt that he had a second-class intelligence but a first-class temperament. Holmes was being condescending. Roosevelt himself was happy to admit that he had no theory of politics, other than being a Christian and a Democrat, but no theorist could have created the modern liberal state and revived his people’s faith in politics in the pit of the Depression.

‘The authority of lived experiences’

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Those with a gift for action, for their part, often express contempt for those whose gifts are more reflective. Men of action like to say, “Those who can, do, those who can’t, teach,” forgetting that those who teach get to write the history books.

You would think very poorly of me if you supposed that I believe I belong in this company. Neither my actual experience nor my reflections on it put me anywhere near their league. I’m simply taking consolation where I can, and what I learned from them, of course, is that failure in politics has its own authority, not equivalent to the validation of success, but the authority of lived experience. Those who have failed in politics have paid for what they know, and those who pay for knowledge in the real currency of life are entitled to a hearing.

These writers are inspiring in another way. They took a very specific experience — the Roman republic in its final decline, the Florentine republic as it tumbled into dictatorship, the American republic in its fiery birth, French politics in the dog days of Louis Philippe, the British Parliament in its imperial heyday, and the stillbirth of German democracy after 1918 — and lifted that specific experience into a generic reflection about the essence of politics. They knew that all politics is local — as we say — shaped by the institutions and historical context that frame the political battle, but they also sought to penetrate to the core of politics as the noblest and most vexatious of all human activities.

Thanks to their struggle to locate the generic within the specifics of their own experience, they have given everyone who has ever served in the front lines of politics the vocabulary to comprehend what they have lived through. And for those contemplating a career in politics, these great writers have always offered the debutant the unvarnished reality of the game, if a debutant would only listen.

Several weeks after my defeat, I went to thank Peter Munk, a wealthy man who had given generously to my campaign despite making no bones about voting for my opponents. There aren’t many good sports like him left. As partisanship gets worse, ecumenical generosity diminishes. He’s the rare exception. Over lunch he told me about a time in the 1970s when a company he started — Clairtone — went bankrupt. After its liquidation, he walked around in the financial district feeling there was a bull’s-eye on his back. He’d recovered his fortune and much more since then, but he had never forgotten what it was like to fail.

In the weeks after my defeat, I had lots of advice from successful people about how to recover. Write romantic fiction, the real estate developer Elvia DelZotto told me, and make yourself some money for a change.

Build yourself a cabin

David Peterson, who had suffered a bruising defeat as premier of Ontario, told me the good thing about defeat is that you regain the right to tell people to go to hell. Peterson is living proof of the adage “living well is the best revenge,” but he added that it took him years to work the pain of failure out of his system. Hard physical exercise helps, he said. Chop down trees, clear brush, build yourself a cabin.

Another friend thought he was being comforting when he said at least I’d get a good book out of it. I told him I hadn’t gone into politics to get a good book out of it.

The remark I remember best, the one that got me thinking about the book I did want to write, came from a taxi driver. As I got into his cab, he pulled his rear-view mirror to get a closer look.

“Are you who I think you are?”

“I am,” I said.

“I voted for you.”

“I’m glad somebody did.”

Then he shrugged and said, “It’s politics.”

It was if he was saying, “Look, this is how the world is. You did not know it before. You know it now.” As we talked, I learned that he was from Lebanon and had been in Canada for 20 years. He combined a cabbie’s shrewd grasp of the democratic politics of his new country and a sardonic memory of the brutal confessional politics of Lebanon. I began to see that “politics” was the word he used for the baffling combination of will and chance that determines the shape of life. The way taxi medallions are awarded in a city, for example, was politics. The way dictators continue to rule poor countries was politics, the way Lebanon was carved up by the civil war was politics and, he was saying, the way well-meaning innocents get beaten was politics. When I paid my fare and left him, I wanted more than anything to write about this politics, this brutal game, this dramatic encounter between fate and will, malignity and nobility that fascinated him as much as it fascinated me.

On August 22, barely three months after winning the greatest political victory of his life, Jack Layton died of cancer at his home at the age of 61. Along with thousands of others, Zsuzsanna and I attended his memorial service in Toronto’s Roy Thomson Hall and afterward walked home through streets filled with melancholy citizens struggling to come to terms with the bitter ironies of fate.

I remember a conversation with one woman who wanted to explain why the media were wrong for criticizing Jack for failing to disclose the true state of his health when he was campaigning. ‘I’m a cancer survivor,” she said. “You say what you have to say. You believe what you have to believe, in order to get through it. Politics doesn’t come into it.” I could only agree.

Sometime in late August, I went to see the Red Sox play the Blue Jays in the Rogers Centre in Toronto. I love the game. My mother loved it too and we spent happy hours of my childhood watching games on a black-and-white TV. Even the game’s longeurs are loveable because they offer opportunities for reverie. As the beer cans and hot dog wrappers accumulated at my feet, I got to thinking that what politics most closely resembles is sports. There is the same team play, the same locker room banter and the same pain when you get beaten.

Trouble is, we call politics a game, but it isn’t one. There is no referee and the teams make up the rules as they go along. You can’t cry foul or offside in politics. Almost anything goes. In sports you play by the rules. In politics you just play and the winner rewrites the rules afterwards . . .

Excerpted from

Fire and Ashes:

Success and Failure in Politics.

Copyright © 2013 Michael Ignatieff. Published by