Style matters in politics.
Political style is a matter of how politicians lead.
It is possible to suffer as a leader by showing too little
personality or projecting too much.
President Barack Obama is a clear case of keeping his light
under a bushel. Because of projecting
little or nothing of himself as a strong leader, he makes himself and his
policies vulnerable.
Take Obamacare. After
several presidents failed to achieve a program to provide health care coverage
to millions, Obama took advantage of a momentary, overwhelming Democratic
majority in Congress to gain the passage of a national health insurance plan.
The program was passed without a single Republican vote and
immediately came under attack. The GOP
realized that it could make an issue of Obamacare, because its complexity would
allow Republican candidates to pull out touchy issues and attack them.
In the 2010 congressional elections, the GOP campaigned
against Obamacare, but Obama was nowhere to be seen in defending it. Since then, he and his party have done little
to campaign in its support.
A couple of weeks ago, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget
Office announced that Obamacare would cost 11 percent less than originally
forecast. That’s because health
insurance premiums are rising more slowly than foreseen.
Have you seen the Democratic television ads touting the millions
of increased signups and the decreased cost?
Of course not, because they have never been produced or aired. The result is that Democrats, lacking Obama’s
support, sometimes run away from the program.
The Republicans have been successful in turning majority
opinion against Obamacare, because it lacks the president’s vigorous and
persistent defense. He did not mention
it once in this year’s State of the Union address.
In foreign policy, Obama has provided massive aerial support
in the conflict against the Islamic State.
The American contribution has been critical in turning back the tide of
the terrorist advance.
But he has done little to wave the flag demonstrating to
Americans and allies that the United States is committed to defeating the Islamic
State and that it leads a coalition making real progress on the ground.
Oddly enough, he walks the walk but doesn’t talk the talk,
just the reverse of many public figures.
That opens the door for unfounded claims he doesn’t love America.
Obama has also fallen short in the easiest of leadership
responsibilities – directing his own troops in Congress. He has difficulty in building support among
Democrats, because he takes what seems to be a hands-off approach to dealing
with them on key bills.
The president comes across as a cool intellectual in a
country yearning for a leader to provide a national rallying point. Many people believe that a strong country
demonstrates its power through the governing style of its leader. Obama’s style undermines that sense of
leadership.
If Obama’s style is too restrained, Maine Gov. Paul LePage
is just the opposite.
Unlike Obama, he does not want the Legislature to operate
independently, but treats it as if it is meant to be subordinate to the
governor. He more often bullies it rather
than cajoling it into supporting his proposals.
Increasingly, observers wonder if he recognizes the
difference between being the chief executive officer of a private corporation,
which he was, and only the head of one branch of state government.
Take his recent tax reform proposal. It is a bold, new look and includes at least some
changes worth considering. Like
virtually any other government proposal ever made, it won’t gain enough support
to be adopted exactly as presented, but, through compromise, some key elements
could be enacted.
Instead of working with legislators to fashion compromises
that could advance his ideas, LePage, obviously believing his electoral victory
last year gives him extraordinary powers, threatens to campaign against
legislators, including those of his own party, who do not go along with him.
That stance could poison the political atmosphere,
undermining both his proposals and public confidence in state government.
Because of a relatively minor difference of emphasis with
the immensely successful head of the state community college system, LePage
threatened to withhold necessary funds for the colleges unless their leader was
ousted. The governor won.
And he forced the Legislature to break an approved deal with
Statoil, one of the world’s largest corporations. He was willing to use unusual and
short-sighted political clout to sacrifice the state’s drive for new business
investment.
Somewhere between Obama and LePage, there’s a political style
needed both to build public confidence in government and promote respect for its
leaders.