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Module 1 — What You’re Really Running For

Module 1 – Item 1: The Reality of Municipal Office



Introduction


Most people who run for municipal office do so with sincere intentions. They care about their community, see problems that need fixing, and believe their skills and common sense can make a positive difference. These motivations are commendable — but they are often paired with an incomplete or inaccurate understanding of what municipal office actually is.


Municipal government is not simply a forum for good ideas. It is a legal, procedural, and administrative system with defined authorities, constraints, and pressures. Many first-time councillors discover, often painfully, that enthusiasm alone is not enough — and that frustration, isolation, or disillusionment can follow quickly when expectations collide with reality.


This section exists to replace assumptions with clarity. It is not meant to discourage capable people from serving, but to ensure that those who do serve do so with open eyes, realistic expectations, and a strong foundation for resilience.


1. What Municipal Officials Can and Cannot Control


One of the most common sources of frustration for new municipal officials is discovering how limited their direct control actually is.


Municipal councils do not run day-to-day operations. They do not directly manage staff, approve individual expenditures, or execute projects themselves. Instead, councils set policy, approve budgets, and provide strategic direction, while administration carries out implementation.


This division of authority exists for good reason, but it can feel counterintuitive to new officials who are accustomed to hands-on leadership roles in business, farming, trades, or community organizations.

Understanding this distinction early is critical. Councillors who attempt to “manage” administration directly often trigger resistance, procedural pushback, or formal complaints — while those who fail to exercise oversight risk becoming passive or irrelevant.


Effective municipal leadership requires learning how to:


• Influence outcomes without micromanaging

• Ask the right questions rather than issuing directives

• Use policy, budgets, and motions as tools of governance


Knowing what you can control — and what you cannot — is the first step toward effectiveness rather than constant conflict.


2. The Gap Between Public Expectations and Legal Authority


Residents often expect municipal officials to “fix” problems that are well outside municipal authority.


Citizens may bring concerns about healthcare, education policy, provincial highways, federal regulations, or private disputes — and expect immediate action. While these concerns are often valid and heartfelt, municipal officials are legally constrained in what they can do.


This gap creates a difficult tension:

  • Ignoring concerns damages trust

  • Promising action beyond your authority damages credibility


New councillors often fall into one of two traps:

  1. Making promises they cannot legally keep

  2. Becoming defensive or dismissive when confronted with issues outside their control

Neither serves the public well.


Responsible leadership involves clearly explaining:

  • What the municipality can act on

  • What it can influence indirectly

  • What lies outside its authority

This honesty builds long-term trust, even when short-term frustration exists.


Candidates who understand this distinction early are better equipped to communicate responsibly and avoid the cycle of overpromising and underdelivering.


3. Why “Common Sense Solutions” Often Meet Resistance


Many candidates enter office believing that clear, logical solutions will naturally gain support once presented. When they encounter resistance — especially from administration, long-serving councillors, or consultants — they are often shocked.


Resistance does not always mean a proposal is wrong. More often, it reflects:

  • Existing policies and precedents

  • Budgetary constraints

  • Legal risks

  • Institutional habits and risk aversion

  • Commitments made years earlier

Municipal systems are designed to move slowly. This protects against rash decisions, but it can also frustrate change.


New officials sometimes interpret resistance as personal opposition, when in reality it is structural. Without understanding the system, they may:


• Push too hard, too fast

• Alienate potential allies

• Burn political capital unnecessarily


Learning how to navigate resistance — rather than react to it — allows councillors to advance ideas strategically, build support, and achieve durable outcomes rather than symbolic victories.


4. The Difference Between Influence, Authority, and Responsibility


Perhaps the most important lesson in municipal governance is understanding the difference between authority, influence, and responsibility.


  • Authority is what the law explicitly allows you to do

  • Influence is your ability to shape outcomes through relationships, persuasion, and preparation

  • Responsibility is your obligation to act in the public interest, even when outcomes are uncertain or unpopular


New councillors often assume authority comes first. In reality, influence is usually more powerful — and responsibility is always present, even when authority is limited.


You may be responsible for decisions you cannot fully control. You may influence outcomes without ever issuing a directive. And you may hold authority without the practical ability to enforce it alone.


Understanding this dynamic helps officials avoid two dangerous extremes:

  • Overestimating their power

  • Underestimating their responsibility

Strong municipal leadership emerges when officials accept responsibility fully, exercise authority carefully, and cultivate influence patiently.


Closing Reflection


This section is intentionally grounding. Some participants may read it and realize that municipal office is not what they imagined — and decide not to proceed. That outcome is not a failure; it is responsible civic discernment.


For those who continue, this understanding becomes a stabilizing force. It reduces shock, manages expectations, and builds resilience. Municipal office is demanding, imperfect, and often misunderstood — but when entered with clarity and humility, it remains one of the most meaningful ways to serve a community.

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Manitoba Stronger Together is a civic education and advocacy initiative helping citizens make informed political decisions, organize effectively, and influence change.

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