Public Servants Serve Citizens and Implement Government Policies
In a multi‑party democracy, citizens entrust a political party with governance for the period prescribed by the constitution. That party exercises power through a mandate from the people. The majority vote decides.
The elected government delivers that mandate through ministries, departments, and agencies. Public servants are the machinery that converts government policy into results. They do not serve a political party. They serve the citizens whose votes conferred authority.
Professional neutrality is the standard
Public sector employees hold diverse political views, and that diversity strengthens democracy. By accepting public office, every employee pledges impartial service to the government and the state. Support is owed to the government’s work programme because that programme reflects the people’s mandate. Refusing to implement lawful policy is not dissent — it is a breach of public trust.
No party identity at work
Public servants must not identify with political parties while in active service. Party symbols, slogans, and affiliations have no place in government offices, uniforms, or official communications.
They must also not form professional political clubs or associations while in service. Groups organised along party lines fracture teams, breed suspicion, and turn colleagues into rivals. The public service must operate as one institution, not competing factions.
The cost of partisanship
When employees judge work through a political lens, decisions slow, merit erodes, and citizens lose confidence. Ministries become extensions of party offices. Qualified staff are sidelined. Projects stall because loyalty outweighs competence.
When neutrality fails
If an employee cannot separate personal politics from official duty, the ethical choice is clear: step aside. Resign, transfer, or recuse yourself from decisions where bias would affect outcomes. Public service demands servants of the state, not political operatives on the public payroll.
A professional public service protects democracy. Elections may change governments, but the commitment to serve every administration and every citizen equally must never change.
Director of Education
Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."