When George H.W. Bush was preparing a run for president, he
asked a friend to suggest key issues for his campaign.
He understood most issues, but sought top
policies to highlight. Time magazine reported that his friend advised him to take time
off, “to figure out where he wanted to take the country.”
“Oh,” replied an obviously annoyed Bush, “the vision thing.” His rejection of advice to find and state his
goals for the country stuck with Bush for the rest of his career.
Like Bush, candidates prefer to focus on only a few current
issues. Often, poll results guide the
campaign agenda.
A recent survey in Maine showed the top two concerns are
health care and the economy. With the
oldest population of any state and increasingly restrictive state policies,
health care makes sense. And just about
every politician runs promising to create “jobs, jobs, jobs.”
Many voters might now understand that promises on these
issues, as on most others in federal or state politics, likely mean little. Presidents and governors depend heavily on
Congress or the Legislature to enact the programs they promise.
Voters still like to be pampered by promises made by
candidates. But they miss the “vision
thing,” a sense of the goals the candidate would pursue. In fact, the
candidate’s vision may be much more important than specific proposals.
Of course, some candidates have no vision, and are driven
only by their desire to gain and hold public office. They make promises first and excuses
later.
The situation is even worse when leaders, lacking a vision,
run the government as if it was their personal property without much regard for
the will or needs of the people. That’s
what seems to be happening now.
President Trump’s main policy focus is himself. His vision often seems to be promoting
himself as being superior to any of his predecessors. He appears to be immune to his relatively low
political popularity, while catering to his “base.”
He has surely convinced himself. When asked about the possibility of being
impeached, he replies that won’t happen, because he is doing such a good job. Yet he makes few claims for his role in economic
growth, because he is so focused on protecting the legitimacy of his 2016
election.
In short, Trump makes no attempt to offer a vision of the
American future that might appeal to voters outside of his base. The focus of his actions is more about
appealing to what some people dislike, especially immigration, than about where
he seeks to lead the country.
In Maine, Gov. LePage seems to believe that his personal
opinion ought to prevail over the popular will.
Even after the voters themselves express a vision for their state on issues
like health care or the minimum wage, he acts as if his position as governor
allows him to ignore the people.
The voters and a majority of the Legislature decided they
want Medicaid to cover more people.
That’s their vision of health care policy. But LePage, who disagrees, believes that he
alone is right on this issue. Courts had
to force him to obey what the voters decided.
LePage’s attitude not only skips the “vision thing,” but
reverses it. In a system based on rule
by and for the people, he substitutes his own opinion, damaging the foundation
of the system itself.
The extent of both Trump’s and LePage’s failure to provide a
broad vision with wide appeal is shown by their use of hostile and divisive language
even against members of their own party.
“I am the state,” they seem to say.
Their vision extends no further than themselves.
That happens elsewhere as well, with negative and
predictable consequences. Victor Orban,
Hungary’s prime minister, opposes a democratic system open and fair to
all. He rejects the principles of the
new Europe, but willingly takes EU financial aid.
At the European Parliament, he was surprised to be censured
last week by an overwhelming vote that included even his conservative political
allies. Unlike many of Trump’s
Republicans, his friends were willing to stand up to him.
Trump and LePage are not models for candidates who would look
beyond themselves to the long-term needs of the nation and state. Candidates’ proposals could fit within a
sensible and consistent view of the political future.
In this year’s campaign, federal and state candidates should share their vision for the governments they would lead. Offering the “vision thing” beats leaving the campaign to the half-truths and negativism of 30-second television spots.