So, I'm here to recruit you.
(Laughter)
But not in the sense that you're thinking.
I know I'm a politician.
I'll save that for another day.
I'm here to try and encourage you
to take up a leadership role
in public service
in your country and on your continent.
I'm here to convince you
that your country
and your continent need you -
not later, not when you're older
and more experienced, but now -
and that whether you realize it or not,
your country's politics
are going to be doomed to fail
unless you're willing
to get involved right now.
So my recruitment pitch
comes with a single disclaimer:
I resigned from public office
18 months ago.
(Laughter)
I did it in order to take stock
of my time in office,
to think about the work that I had done,
to capacitate myself with skills,
knowledge, contacts,
allies and experiences,
and to find a little bit of personal
and professional perspective.
It's one of the best decisions
I think I've ever made.
I imagine that some time during the next
18 minutes while I'm pitching you,
you're going to think,
"Yeah, it's easy for you to say
I should go into public service.
You've already done it and you've left."
But I hope I'll be able to convince you
that, in fact, we all find ourselves
in exactly the same boat right now.
Because being outside
of politics for 18 months
has reminded me
just how important it is
and just how much the political landscapes
in my country and in your countries
and on our continent
are truly lacking in good leadership
and political talent.
So, I want to make a deal with you.
I'm not going to return to active politics
unless you come with me.
(Laughter)
I'm not going to do it alone.
I won't go back unless I can convince
smart, entrepreneurial, highly skilled,
talented, experienced
young Africans like yourselves
and millions more like you
across the continent,
that the best chance
that our countries have,
not just for survival
but for lasting prosperity,
is if our most talented
citizens step forward
and make themselves available,
either for political party, leadership
or for public service and government.
So over the next 16-or-so minutes
that are remaining,
I'm going to alternately
flatter you, as I just have,
(Laughter)
I'm going to challenge you,
I'm going to talk to you
about my experiences,
about a couple of facts and figures;
I may even frighten you a little bit.
And it'll be entirely worth it
if that fear convinces you
of the urgency of the point in history
that we find ourselves in today.
Everything I say today will be
in service of a single objective:
convincing you, showing you,
that your countries need you;
that Africa's prosperity
may depend on many things -
entrepreneurialism,
industrial development,
health reform, social upliftment -
but that all of these hinge
upon the success of politics
and government in our countries.
I can't begin a talk
about public service, of course,
without honoring my former
president Nelson Mandela,
the father of democratic South Africa.
(Cheers) (Applause)
President Mandela passed away
on this day in 2013.
I really believe that
when the people of my country
look back on the day that he passed away,
it'll be seen as an inflection point
in South Africa's history.
The day we decided whether we could,
indeed, go it alone without him.
What's written in those history books
will depend entirely
on whether this generation,
which includes all of you
sitting in this room,
recognizes that the time has come for us
to take up the work
that President Mandela left for us,
before that work is captured by people
who would use power and politics
for empty vanity and personal gain.
I'm referring, of course,
to the young man who was here
in London this very past week.
Defiling the name of the visionary leader,
the intellectual and political strategist,
the formidable athlete,
the Prince of the Abathembu nation
who served as a South Africa's
first democratic president.
The young man who tried to taint
President Mandela's legacy
with a few throwaway lines,
all in service of getting
cheap headlines, which he got.
People like this,
who we leave public service to
when we stay out
of the fray of public service,
are the reason your country
and my country needs you and needs us.
So let us begin.
I want to first talk to you
about the African diaspora.
You may have heard
about a study in 2013
that revealed
that cash transfers from Africans
living outside of the continent
have now begun to exceed donor aid
from foreign countries into Africa.
(Applause)
In 2012, total remittances to Africa
stood at 60 billion dollars
while in the same year,
official development aid
to Sub-Saharan Africa
totalled 44.6 billion by comparison.
Now, this got me thinking.
If we can do such great work
with our money from outside of Africa,
what can we do with our skills,
our talent, our experiences,
our education and our passion
for our countries and for our continent?
I've spent the past semester
at the Harvard Kennedy School
as a fellow at the Institute of Politics.
I ran a seminar which was called
"How to build a democracy?
Lessons from South Africa."
It was also about Zimbabwe and Malawi.
And it wasn't intended
to make it seem like we got
everything right in South Africa,
but it was asking the critical question:
Now that we have this legacy
of peaceful transition,
of constitutionalism,
of difficult negotiations,
which were very, very difficultly gotten,
are we going to be successful
in entrenching that democracy
and making it last into the future?
Now, one of the benefits
of being an African
in an academic setting like New England
is that other African students
reach out to you,
they want to talk to you,
and many of them express to you
their desire to enter public service.
So I had students knocking down my door,
wanting to talk to me in office hours
about the fact that they have
Ghanean parents
but they were born in Texas.
They really wanted to give back to Ghana,
but they're afraid that if they go home,
nobody will take them
seriously as real Africans.
I had students who said they had families,
wives, children, husbands,
partners to take care of,
perhaps they were better off
staying in the United States
and providing for their families back home
rather than going back
and getting into public service.
This got me thinking
about the question of skills remittance,
of talent remittance,
of social and political remittance.
If these young people have the passion
to give back to their
communities monetarily,
imagine how different
our politics would be
if those same skills,
influence, leadership, talent
were put at work in service
of the public good.
And that includes all of you in this room
because many of you
are also part of the diaspora.
I'm here to recruit you.
I'm here to make a deal with you.
I'm not going back
unless I take you with me.
(Laugther)
Now, I know that most of you,
if not the vast majority of you,
are completely fed up, turned off,
discouraged, disgusted by politics,
either in your country,
in this country, all over the world.
Perhaps you are discouraged by the fact
that governments are slow to deliver.
Perhaps they're inefficient.
Perhaps they are thoroughly
corrupt and rotten to the core.
Perhaps they're responsible
for conflicts that have claimed lives
and livelihoods in the countries
from which you come.
So why would you sink your time
and your energies
into such a compromised system?
One of the most powerful analyses
of conflict, inefficiency,
corruption, stagnation
which I've encountered
in recent months
is the question of a political economy.
There is a reason that our governments
are not performing as they should.
It's not just because of
a failure within the system.
Consider the political economy of conflict
and corruption in your own country.
Why is it so difficult to overcome?
Who is making money or amassing power
because things don't work
the way they should?
Where does the back stop?
Who has an incentive to keep
the system dysfunctional?
And how can we work together
to overcome their
total infection of the system,
to ensure that we don't lose our grip
on the very principle
of democratic governance?
The answer, I'm afraid,
because you were born
into this political time,
is simply by taking over -
you have to get involved.
There's no way around it.
You have to join political organizations
in numbers large enough
to influence change from within.
You have to actively seek
to take up a leadership role
in government, in the state,
in the public service
and deftly but decisively move
its priorities to where they should be:
not in the service of people who want
to amass power and money for themselves,
but to better the lives
of the highest number of people.
There will always be government,
whether we like it or not,
whether we find it palatable or not.
But there won't always be democracy.
If we ignore politics,
the people who have been quietly
lobbying our governments
to prioritize development
ahead of democracy,
these are the people
who will have their way,
and the systems that we now take
for granted will dissolve before our eyes.
When I was campaigning in South Africa
last year for the 2014 general election,
the voter registration numbers
looked a little bit like this,
six months before the election:
23% of potential voters
in the 18-to-19-year-old age group
were registered to vote.
In the age group 20 to 29 years old,
55% were registered.
And from 30 upwards,
the number varied from 79 to 100%;
in fact, there were more people
aged 80 and over who were registered
than were in the census
numbers in South Africa.
Imagine that.
Fully 100% of people over a certain age
consider voting to be
an indispensable right,
21 years into democracy,
and do not shirk their responsibility
to register and turn out at the polls.
But in the 18-to-19-year-old age group -
and we must remember 19 is
the average age on our continent;
26 is the average age in South Africa -
the number is 23% to 55%.
What's the political economy
of voter apathy?
Who benefits when we stay
out of the system?
Who gets to keep the status quo
and empower themselves
and enrich themselves
and continue to infect
our political system like a cancer.
Who banks by us continuing
with the status quo?
Now even as I say all of this to you,
that your country and your continent
need you to enter public service,
I know that if you take up my challenge,
you're going to face
huge amounts of resistance -
all because of these political economies
that I have just described.
I did.
I was told that I was too young.
I was too female.
(Laughter)
I didn't have enough experience
though no one could define
what experience was enough.
I had too much of a white accent;
I wasn't a real African.
I straightened my hair and wore weaves;
I wasn't a real African.
We should be honest
about the things that hold people back
from entering public service -
humiliation, degradation;
it's not an easy road -
but all of these things
should illustrate to you
the extent to which
the status quo is designed
to enrich and empower a few
at the expense of the many,
and it should impart to you
the urgency of you, as a generation,
of now getting involved in public service
to change that very culture.
And if you decide to enter public service,
you may even be tempted to believe
some of these criticisms.
They're designed to keep you out;
that's how gatekeeping works.
Somebody is benefiting
from the absence of excellence
and disruption in politics and government.
But these are challenges
that have to be faced on.
There is no other route;
there is no wishing this away.
They are the reason that your country
and your continent need you.
We have this thing in politics in Africa;
it's called the "big man."
The cult of personality - we've all heard
different terminologies for it.
In South Africa, in particular,
this entails waiting for a great person
to come and save us from ourselves.
Currently, we're waiting for
Cyril Ramaphosa or Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma
or [inaudible] to come and save
South Africa from itself,
to save us from the mess
that we find ourselves in
that perhaps another big man put us in.
But how can a single personality
be held responsible
for building or for running
a whole nation?
And where do we turn when they fail?
If we haven't cultivated any kind
of pipeline of energetic, young people
who wanted to enter
public service now or in the future
and, critically,
who can do the job better,
are we doomed to always have to choose
between mediocrity and ego,
and mediocrity and ego?
Is that it?
Is that all our government will ever be?
Or worse: Are we going to stand by
while presidents change constitutions
so they can serve a third term
and a fourth term and a fifth term,
claiming that three million people
signed a petition
stating that they are the only person
who can do the job?
(Laughter) (Applause)
Is that what we'll do?
Now, there's a new energy
around entrepreneurism
and innovation and growth
in Africa today.
But that energy isn't going to translate
into lasting prosperity
unless we get our politics right.
Political leaders who are
gatekeepers of the status quo
will claim that any success
is their success.
They'll centralize power,
and they'll demand that we all be grateful
for those little green
shoots of achievement,
and then they'll claim
that nobody else can do the job.
They'll argue that development
must come first, freedom can come later,
and that they are the best
benevolent dictator to do the job.
They'll take your political voice from you
when times are a little bit good,
and when times go bad,
they will refuse to give it back.
There is no prosperity for our continent
without a vibrant, diverse,
and truly competitive politics,
founded upon excellence, transparency
and commitment to the public good.
Our politics will not have
any of these qualities
unless talented, young people,
the best people,
step forward at this moment
in Africa's history,
when we're emerging from that stereotype
of the dark continent,
the hopeless continent,
and commit themselves to public service.
We must run for office.
We must work in the civil service.
We must disrupt the political status quo.
We must prevent the rush to the bottom.
You really are the ones
that you have been waiting for.
There are no great saviors
waiting somewhere in the wings
to save us from future problems.
There's nobody who is waiting in the wings
to come and save us from ourselves;
there's just us.
And I'm not going back without you.
(Laughter)
So, will you take up the challenge?
Thank you.
(Cheers) (Applause)