Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Is political leadership over as we know it?

Let's start at the top on the $700 billion financial bailout or whatever you want to call it:

President Bush. Done. End of story.

Treasury Secretary Henry "Hank" Paulson. A bit better but suffering from an incurable disease: Perceived ties to investors on the street formerly known as Wall, which has destroyed the public interest and pitted small business against big business in ways that haven't been seen since the Great Depression. Ok, sorry for that last phrase. We had to work the cliche in somehow. Paulson, an appointee not an elected official, isn't helping his cause by laying blame on foreclosures and then saying things like "we're doing this for the American taxpayer." That just doesn't wash.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke? While understandably difficult to follow Alan Greenspan, the original architect of sub-prime mania, Bernanke looks like he's on the verge of a nervous breakdown every time he visits Capitol Hill. Fully understandable -- just not what anyone wants to see from the guy in charge of cash flow.

Congress? Members of the House and Senate are notorious for appearing to stand up for the folks while the cameras are rolling -- only to cave in later out of fear. That's what feels like is happening now. In political terms, a vote for the bailout may put the 2002 Iraq war vote to shame. We're holding out hope that the counter balance to the conventional wisdom -- do this now or else -- will produce a better outcome.

Where are the nation's "best and brightest" CEOs? Oh, that's right. Hiding away counting up their cash while dialing their hedge fund and private equity buds to see where the next deal may lie. Others are polishing up their resumes with turnover season now in full swing.

The exception always seems to be Warren Buffett who has invested $5 billion into Goldman Sachs. It shouldn't always take a brand name such as Buffett to step up. But thank God he does.

The two presidential candidates? Not even in the park. Both are holding back, making political calculations about what to say and do instead of standing up right now and declaring what they think should be done in definitive terms. If anyone thinks Barack Obama and John McCain are capable leaders in the mold of Teddy Roosevelt, then we have some free beachfront property that's not foreclosed. It's not entirely their fault -- more about this inane way we go about electing the leader of the free world.

Yes, leaders and students of leadership, we are now entering uncharted territory.

No one has shown capability to lead the country right now. Out of fairness to the current slate, maybe a better question is: Can the country even be led in its current state?

If nothing else, the bailout issue gives new meaning to the saying: All politics are local. Former titans (and friends) such as Tip O'Neil and Ronald Reagan may need to be raised from the dead at the current rate.


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