Guest Column | by Tracy Stone Lawson
Malts in the Cafeteria
A presidential election lost.
Posted August 02, 2010
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When I was in sixth grade, three of my classmates and I ran for student council president. The entire student body would vote, and the one with the most votes would be president; second-most vice president; third, secretary; and fourth, treasurer. Looking back, I suppose the other three offices were mostly for show. There was little opportunity for us to manage a lot of cash. The vice president was only there in case the president was sick and unable to fulfill the obligations of the office. The presidency was the only job that really mattered, and that was the job I wanted.
I hope you’ll believe me when I say I was motivated by only the purest intentions — I sincerely wanted to make the school a better place. I put a lot of time and thought into my speech and carefully selected an outfit to wear.
I realize now that my ideas for leading the school through the 1976-77 school year were nothing monumental. I wanted to place a suggestion box in the library so any student could make his or her ideas known; I wanted to start a student newspaper. Maybe there was something in the speech about soliciting student volunteers to pick up litter from the playground, and that the big kids should be deterred from bullying the little kids. At the time it seemed like a solid platform.
On Election Day, I wore my white sweater with a hand-lettered campaign button pinned over my heart. We gave our speeches at a podium set up at the front of the cafeteria.
Todd, a red-haired, freckled boy on whom I’d had a crush since fourth grade, gave his speech first. It (unlike him) was nothing remarkable. Though my heart was still loyal and he was definitely the cutest boy in our class, he was not, I decided, presidential material. My best friend, Debbie, gave her speech next. She was a worthier opponent, and prettier than me, but still I felt confident, thinking I had a real shot at the power seat at Sharonville Elementary. I knew Debbie really wanted to be class secretary, but since there was just the one election, she was hoping for third place in the popular vote.
Campaign Promise Turns the Tide
Then it was Chris’s turn. I remember just one sentence from his speech, but it was the sentence that torpedoed my dreams of the presidency: “Elect me and we will have malts in the cafeteria … every day!”
Now, really — frozen chocolate malts were a coveted treat. They cost a quarter extra, and the cafeteria ladies put them on the lunch menu maybe twice a month. To blithely suggest that it was within the student council president’s authority to open the floodgates and provide unlimited chocolate malts was … irresponsible.
But it didn’t matter, as long as the voters believed it.
My carefully thought-out speech was lost to the ages. Nothing I said would have mattered at that point. Chris had the election in the bag.
Chicanery! I was indignant, and even though the word chicanery wasn’t in my vocabulary at the time, I had just been schooled on the concept.
When the votes were tallied, the results were announced over the school public-address system. Chris had been elected president, I was vice president, Debbie was secretary, and Todd treasurer.
A month after our inauguration it became painfully clear that Chris could not deliver on his campaign promise, and his approval rating plunged. Hobbled by the bureaucracy in the cafeteria, he resigned office before he could be impeached. As vice president I assumed the president’s duties, and the suggestion box was installed in the library.
Malts in the cafeteria. Every time a politician makes a promise, that’s what I hear. It’s all just malts in the cafeteria.
Source: http://www.thefreemanonline.org/headline/malts-in-the-cafeteria/
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