The mysterious Mother Goose’s “Hickory, Dickory, Dock” is a meaningless but catchy English nursery rhyme with ancient Celtic origins. It has entertained children for more than the last three centuries and helps the shepherds to count their herd. Various historical and linguistic interpretations of the rhyme exist that destroys the fun of this rhyme. Many argue that it serves as a historical allegory of mocking Richard Cromwell—the son of Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of England. People nicknamed Richard as “Tumbledown Dick” and “Hickory Dick” because of his timidity and his reputation as a weak ruler, especially in contrast to his formidable father. The rhyme is a perfect allegory for contemporary cowardly cunning leadership, irrespective of party lines and ideological divides, across institutional and non-institutional settings where multiple forms of authoritarianism exist—whether in the name of ideology or through operational values devoid of any ideological basis.
Leaders in various fields talk about ideology and principles but operate in an ideologyfree zone, where principles are strictly for the followers. They prefer to stay unaccountable in their everyday lives, and there are no principles for the leaders themselves to follow. Such hollowness, selfishness and opportunistic culture of leadership is a product of a meaningless managerial culture found within various forms and stages of capitalism. Leadership is not about managerialism. Leadership is about taking the difficult path of challenging all forms of power to transform society along a democratic and progressive trajectory. It is the courage of conviction to swim against the current. Leadership is about sacrifice.
Contemporary leaders are crude, cunning, and careerist managers—but they are not leaders who can change society or any institution, for that matter. The compliance culture of managerialism is shaping the everyday lives of leaders in today’s capitalist society, which operates according to the system’s own requirements. All leaders, irrespective of their ideology, prefer the centralisation of decision-making and power. One form of authoritarianism or another is the governing principle of the world today.
Therefore, V. I. Lenin, in his book Left-Wing Communism: An Infantile Disorder (1920), worried about the “careerists, charlatans, and unreliable persons” in politics—both among leaders and their followers, who pursue power solely for profit. Lenin argued that this “shameless careerism” is part of a “bourgeois-vulgarized parliamentary” culture, which can be found in various professions and even in trade union movements. These opportunists are enemies of the people and of society. Lenin goes further to argue that careerist leaders and their blind followers produce and regenerate a “bourgeois environment” that gives rise to “bourgeois careerism, national chauvinism, petty-bourgeois vulgarity, etc., only varying insignificantly in form—in positively every sphere of activity and life,” determined by market forces.
Market-led democracies, states, governments, families, individuals, educational institutions, prisons, judiciaries, legal systems, and political parties—alongside economic, political, cultural, and social systems, as well as journalists, teachers, doctors, political activists, and leaders—are all operating on the basis of a managerial hierarchy. Their primary function is to manage people and their opinions on various issues without threatening the establishment that governs our lives, resources, and the planet.
The majority of leaders across the world today are not products of revolutionary struggles or mass movements. Contemporary leaders are forged through networks of power, privilege and propaganda. Leadership built on such a foundation inevitably serves the interests of that network. Therefore, these leaders seek legitimacy during elections and forget about voters once elected. This universal norm extends from politics to various spheres of life, where leadership lacks a moral compass and a vision to lead the masses. Autocratic, managerial, and technocratic leaders lack any kind of vision, idealism, or coherent plan of actions to lead people along a progressive path.
So, driving out these careerist leaders and their followers from every sphere of public life is essential; without it, all attempts at radical and revolutionary change are sucked into the establishment, and capitalist systems absorb these radical revolutions precisely due to compromised leadership and their careerist ambitions free from any ideals, ideologies and visions to serve the people and planet. These careerist leaders promote stong institutions, centralised power and strong state and government for governance which weakens people in their everyday lives.
Collective leadership, individual responsibilities and collective accountabilities can be alternative model of governance where pursuit of collective happiness and minimise everything that poses threat to collective foundations of society, state and governments. These alternatives are not only historic but also has been used sucessfully in various parts of the world. From Marinaleda village in Andalusia, southern Spain to Chinese experiment with united front strategy of decision making, implementation and public delivery of welfare service for the empowerment of individuals and their citizenship rights reveal about the power of collective leadership.

