Smugness vs. Humility: What Works in Conservative and Progressive Leadership

Remember the letter that George H.W. Bush wrote to Bill Clinton after the 1992 presidential election? He left it in the desk at the Oval Office for Clinton to receive post-inauguration. The letter was considered the mark of civility in that a defeated Bush wished Clinton well, and told Clinton that he was now  “our” president, and “your success now is our country’s success. I am rooting hard for you.”

Describing the essence of Bush’s action, Andy Smarick in The Weekly Standard asks where the days of unity went:

It demonstrates America’s proud tradition of peaceful transitions of power and highlights Bush’s ability to show kindness and maintain impeccable manners in what must have been his most dispiriting professional moment. But that generous letter is also the byproduct of a worldview; it’s a point on a straight line between a political philosophy and an approach to public policy. We do ourselves, and our politics, a disservice by separating the letter and its sentiments from the author’s views on governing. They’re part of the same fabric.

Smarick argues that the qualities of modesty and humility are conservative in nature and inform attitudes about collectivism. He points to a 2011 article by the University of Toronto-Scarborough’s Andrew Stark that explains that by their very nature, conservatives don’t put a lot of faith in the ability to herd people into political units to be measured and organized even while they trust their fellow man to make good decisions.

As a result, Smarick notes:

(C)onservatives are deeply skeptical about governing strategies that presume too much about our capacities—for instance, centralization, muscular government, expert administrators, and grand schemes. This naturally leads the conservative to seek to limit the authority of others: decentralization, the separation of governmental powers into branches, trusting small voluntary associations over compulsory state bodies, putting faith in markets over central plans. But—crucially—this humility extends down to the self and shapes how the temperamentally conservative individual engages in the public’s business: I am limited. I may be wrong. I need to trust others.

It was because of his humility that Bush succeeded in building coalitions, whether global or in Washington. It was his “personal modesty, deference to longstanding institutions, and dependence on local decision-making” that enabled him to cross the bridge between his own decision-making and majority rule, Smarick says.

But much of that behavior has gone the way of the 20th century. The difference in progressive vs. conservative leadership has grown wider over the last 25 years even as the right now trends toward left-leaning styles of governance.

For progressives, the whole notion of humility is long out the window, if it ever was a guiding principle. Leftists themselves acknowledge that idea, Smarick says, pointing to several liberals who have acknowledged their own “smug” condescension for the idea that people can take care of themselves. This distrust of self-governance manifests itself in the presumption that right-leaning Americans are uninformed and that makes them wrong, and that means they need to be told how to behave and what to think.

Yet, that’s precisely what blinded the left to the rise of Donald Trump. The left believed that Americans want to be organized and told what to do, and in the telling, they could be led to conclusions that they wouldn’t reach on their own. Trump, using the very bombast and conceit that is considered uncharacteristic of the right, tapped into the frustration felt by the half of America that was sick of being told that they don’t know what’s good for them.

With the campaign over, governing begins, and as humility and modesty are not guiding traits for Trump, therein lies the danger for conservatives who don’t want top-down policies. Trump’s success will depend on being able to decentralize governance while not letting his opponents or his followers slip into badgering Americans into accepting what’s good for them. Trump must pair his leadership and management skills with the conservative traits of humility, modesty, and trust in others to demonstrate how limited government can help the most people succeed.

The outright rejection of alternative viewpoints brings with it inaction and further division. This is true for both left and right. Trump needs to form the connective tissue to pull together these disparate parts. Multiple interests coming together to create agreeable and elastic solutions will have the greatest impact on our economic and cultural outcomes.

Smarick notes that the conciliatory victory speech by Trump is a good start for maintaining the ground game of where political conservatives can go from here, even if society trends toward slogans not solutions.

(N)o one should be accused of cynicism for doubting that the national political scene is about to enter a golden age of humility. It may well be the case that politics will always privilege hubris. We get fired up for “hope and change,” “morning in America,” and “happy days are here again,” not for modest expectations and incrementalism. The buoyant confidence of FDR, Reagan, Bush 43, and Obama was rewarded with reelection. The humility of a Gerald Ford or Bush 41 was not.

But we should also recognize that the greatest line in our greatest president’s greatest speech masterfully blended conviction and modesty. Abraham Lincoln ended his second inaugural by encouraging the nation simultaneously to pursue justice while recognizing our limited ability to ascertain it—”with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right.” Perhaps appreciating—even embracing—the tension between those cardinal principles was essential for acting with malice toward none, offering charity to all, and binding up the nation’s wounds.

Read the entire article by Smarick in The Weekly Standard.

Harvard Business School Study Blames Gridlock for Lower Economic Growth

In a world where over-reliance on government to steer, monitor, and correct private behavior has sucked the courtesy out of human discourse, it should come as no surprise that one of America’s largest educational institutions is reporting that political gridlock is hampering economic growth.

Harvard University’s Business School blames political stalemate in Washington for limited economic growth.

“The federal government has made no meaningful progress on the critical policy steps to restore U.S. competitiveness in the last decade or more.”

Reporting on the study says:

U.S. gross domestic product grew at a rate of about 2 percent since 2000, well below the 3 to 4 percent average in the prior half-century. … The study contends that factors including a growing wealth gap, declines in productivity growth, and a rise in the number of working-age people neither employed nor seeking jobs show that the U.S. economy is becoming less competitive.

At the same time, Harvard reports that the companies most likely to benefit from Washington’s corporate cronyism — larger companies and million-dollar-funded Silicon Valley startups — are keeping the wheels turning, while small businesses are no longer the lifeblood of America’s economic engine.

More damaging still, the authors were quoted saying that the distortion is growing in a political election season filled with mis- and disinformation.

To us, the confused national discussion about our economy and future prosperity in this election year is our worst nightmare,” they say. “There is almost a complete disconnect between the national discourse and the reality of what is causing our problems and what to do about them.

This misunderstanding of facts and reality is dangerous, and the resulting divisions make an already challenging agenda for America even more daunting.”

The lingering premise of the study, which has the subheadline: “Political Dysfunction is the Greatest Barrier to Strengthening U.S. Competitiveness,” suggests that Americans can’t drive economic growth without central government.

Could dismantling some of the regulatory hurdles that businesses face make it easier for Americans to contribute to growth? Of course, but that can’t be done without Washington’s cooperation in reducing government. So if America’s politicians can’t cooperate, how are the rest of us expected to get along?

One major irony of the report, which was cited in more than a dozen news stories on Wednesday and Thursday, is that its conclusions came from an overwhelming consensus  of … Harvard alumni. That’d be Harvard alumni across party lines. Bet you didn’t know that was a thing. More amusing still, Harvard Business School’s tag line is: “We educate leaders who make a difference in the world.” What is less amusing is the likelihood that Harvard alumni populate a great number of the institutions faulted for the gridlock.

While a concurrent study showed that only a portion of the blame for lower economic growth goes to government among the general public across party lines, the Harvard study did make some suggestions that many may find at least somewhat appealing. They include changing the corporate tax code, allowing more highly skilled immigrants into the U.S., streamlining federal regulations, improving infrastructure, reforming the K-12 education system, and addressing unfair global trade practices.

Many of the news reports were cited on Harvard Business School’s news page, but the report itself was not clickable. It linked to an empty comments page. There’s gotta be irony in there somewhere.