TRD101: The One
TRD101: The One
by Michael Maynard
March 15, 2006
Now
that the Oscars are over, and as of tomorrow morning, you’ll have
turned in your “for entertainment purposes only” NCAA college
basketball March Madness brackets picks, the collective odds-making
punditry will turn its “six will get you five” focus to the quadrennial
beauty pageant known as the Presidential elections. We’ve already begun
to see the before-conception poll results matching those whom the
“Inside the Beltway”self anointed political elite think will be the
candidates. The top two names being bandied around and test against
each other in the polls are Senators John McCain and Hillary Rodham
Clinton.
Neither will win their party’s nomination, let alone
the Presidential election. But, as usual, I’m ahead of myself, so let’s
not discuss who will be the candidates at this time, but what is needed
in a candidate to be successful in 2008 and in his or her one or two
terms in office.
Would I like to be President? Of course! As
modest, calm and diplomatic as I am, I’d make a great President and
would have wiped out at least 5 countries by this time in the second
term. The annexation of Canada and Mexico would be nearing completion.
My Vice (ahem) President, Catherine Zeta-Jones-Douglas-Maynard, would
have been put in charge of that program to take her mind off of the
unfortunate hunting accident loss of her late husband. The House of
Representatives, if ever let back in session, would start running
smoothly under the direction of
Speaker for Life, William Belichick.
No,
I would not like to be President of the United States under any
circumstances. It is the ultimate in high responsibility, low direct
authority stress-laden job. You don’t have direct control over the
purse strings. You can attempt to develop a strategic plan and
direction, but have to get two boards of directors totaling 535 members
to sign off on it. Forget planagement because by the time the
implementation has gone through all the levels of bureaucracy and
agencies involved, you probably won’t remember what you wanted to have
done. There’s no direct bottom line and you’re accountable to billions
of shareholders.
And that’s the easy part of the job. What would
drive me most crazy is the 3 years I would have had to spend on the
road giving the same stump speech, hitting up people for money and
smiling at some lame joke being made by a local factotum in East Podunk
after an already 18 hour day. Then there is the 24 hour news
organizations who are sitting on every word you say, waiting for you to
screw up or say something controversial so you hear it in an endless 72
hour feedback cycle. No, I wouldn’t want to be President that much to
go through this process. The joke about anyone wanting to run for
President being disqualified for being crazy appears to me to be prima
facie accurate.
Who would want to be President of the United
States in 2008? The war in Iraq will likely still be in a deadly
stalemate. The US economy will be in the dumper because of the
disastrous fiscal and monetary policies of the previous administration.
The healthcare crisis will remain unsolved and unchecked. Action on
global warming will need to be taken immediately and the list of
problems and issues is endless. Global relationships will be at an all
time low. The red-state/blue-state culture wars will be in full rampage
after the election. You face all of this after being elected with no
more than 52% of the 40% of those who could have voted and probably
facing a split or dual opposition Congress.
Why would anyone want this job now?
Senators
Clinton and McCain are very bright and very capable people. Both might
be excellent Presidents under different circumstances. Right now, both
are so polarizing because of their legislative and personal views and
histories, I doubt either would go far in their party’s primaries. Mrs.
Clinton, through little fault of her own, is anathema to the Middle
American male voter and Mr. McCain, because of his personal believes,
is anathema to a majority of women voters.
What is needed now is
a healer, a person of charisma, dignity, intelligence, modesty and
humor who can start the slow uniting and refocusing of all the country,
especially after an unpopular and costly war. Neither Senator McCain
nor Senator Clinton are healers. Neither are Senator Kerry nor Senator
Biden, good men as they are. Perhaps Senator Hagel is, but his views on
social issues will cause many on the left to tune him out completely.
Senator Feingold lost me when he didn’t put up a stronger fight against
Supreme Court Judge Samuel Alito’s nomination. Now pushing for the
censuring of President Bush strikes me very strongly of grandstanding.
What does censuring George Bush now do to change the direction of this
country and the world? At best, nothing and more likely, nothing good.
Forget Mitt Romney. Perhaps Governor Warner, Kaine of Vilsack will grow
on me, but thus far, they appear to be in critical need of personality
implants.
Think back to the person who galvanized the 2004
Democratic convention with his speech and subsequent interviews. He’s
the one, he’s the healer - Barack Obama.
TRD101 knows this: I’ve
worked with top executives. I’ve run companies. You can’t compare being
President of the United States with any CEO position because it’s
unlike any other job in the world. You have to be destined, you have to
be the one to be an excellent President. Very few of us are so destined
and fewer of them can do that job well. Only one can at a time.
And that is the Real Deal 101 for today, like it or not.
Send your comments and questions or to be added to TRD101's distribution list to:
mikemaynard@mindspring.com
© Copyright Michael Maynard, TRD101, March 2006.