Article image
David Sirota
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Friday 28 September 2012
“In looking at the Massachusetts matchup between Republican incumbent Scott Brown and Democratic nominee Elizabeth Warren, the magazine quotes Brown fundraiser Lawrence McDonald, a former Lehman trader, acknowledging that he and his Wall Street friends hate the idea of an independently informed legislator who might bring her own wisdom to Washington.”

The Choice Between Automatons and Leaders

Article image

Ask corporate executives what they really want in a legislator, and they probably won't use words like "principled" or "well-informed." If the cocktails are appropriately strong and inhibitions are consequently reduced, executives will likely tell you in a moment of candor that the best politician, from their perspective, is the one who is incurious and who possesses very little policy expertise. They don't want people with inconvenient morals, ethics or brains getting in their way. They want the equivalent of T-1000s from the "Terminator" films: unthinking, fully programmable cyborgs willing and able to shape-shift in order to carry out a mission.

Alas, it is rare to get such an admission in public, and it is even more rare to get said admission in the pages of a major publication. That's why Businessweek's recent examination of the country's marquee U.S. Senate race is so significant. In looking at the Massachusetts matchup between Republican incumbent Scott Brown and Democratic nominee Elizabeth Warren, the magazine quotes Brown fundraiser Lawrence McDonald, a former Lehman trader, acknowledging that he and his Wall Street friends hate the idea of an independently informed legislator who might bring her own wisdom to Washington.

"If Warren were to win, McDonald says, she'd be 'seen as an expert' by a second Obama administration, which he finds terrifying," the magazine reported. "Scott Brown is 'just a good senator,' McDonald adds. 'He wouldn't be an adviser to either candidate in a financial crisis.'"

Get that? Warren is disliked precisely because of her years of distinguished research as a Harvard professor, her tenure heading the Congressional Oversight Panel for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, and her overall unwillingness to take orders from corporate interests. Meanwhile, Brown is praised as a "good senator" specifically because he lacks policy knowledge that might help him counsel government officials on how to deal with another bank meltdown.

Oh, and because as a lawmaker, he has a proven track record of saying "how high" when Wall Street says "jump."

To be sure, McDonald's general lament about the arbitrary assignment of expert status certainly has a grain of truth in it. Essentially, America is run by false experts — indeed, all you have to do is thumb through Chris Hayes' recent book "Twilight of the Elites" to know that national politics is dominated by people who have little experience in, and knowledge of, those policy areas in which they claim to possess expertise. And this is a problem in both parties.

For instance, Democrats tout Colorado U.S. Senator Michael Bennet as their go-to expert on education. But he is a man who spent only a little over three years in any education-related position (as an appointee in the Denver school system) and who spent the vast majority of his career as a political aide and corporate raider with "no teaching or school administration experience," according to the Denver Post. Likewise, Republican Rudy Giuliani has long been billed as a foreign policy and national security expert merely because he happened to be New York City's mayor on 9/11, not for any actual experience in those fields.

But, then, the seeming randomness of the "expert" label highlights special interests' antipathy toward legislators with genuine expertise. Through political stagecraft — corporate-funded symposia, conferences, speeches, etc. — those interests help manufacture policy "expert" status for expertise-free politicians like Bennet, Giuliani and other automatons who are most willing to simply take orders.

Warren is different — a leader with more knowledge and intelligence on economic issues than almost anyone in Washington. That's why, as Businessweek says, Wall Streeters are desperately hoping her opponent defeats her in the upcoming election. Like every special interest with business in the nation's capital, they fear anyone coupling legislative power with independent thought.

Copyright Creators.com


Get Email Alerts from NationofChange
Author pic
ABOUT David Sirota

David Sirota is a best-selling author of the new book "Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live In Now." He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado.

Top Stories

3 comments on "The Choice Between Automatons and Leaders"

JoeWeinstein

September 28, 2012 1:59pm

This article unwittingly reveals the sorry and grossly inadequate notion which not only is held by corporate executives but even by many supposedly radical activists, and which anyhow underlies our entire political system and its antiquated 225-year-old constitution. The notion is that public decision-making should (1) be in the hands of a few all-powerful long-term oligarchs and (2) that the procedures of this decision-making need follow not modern scientific-age norms but just the oligarchs' whims.

According to the article, whether or not over the next few years this nation follows rational and informed economic policies will come down to who wins a particular Massachusetts popularity contest this November. No matter who if anyone is really an expert, this is a crazy way to approach the business of making public decisions.

Leaving decision-making to a few all-powerful long-term oligarchs - rather than to many short-term deliberative teams of public-spirited ordinary citizens - subverts the notion of a government 'of laws not of men'. What really counts and should count is not who wins mass popularity contests (in Mass. or anywhere else) but what procedures of reason and deliberation are followed in making laws and policies.

Contrary to the article's implication, if we want good public policy, it's neither necessary nor sufficient to choose 'leaders' rather than 'automatons'. A scientifically adequate approach to policy and law decisions does not require that any of the decision-makers be experts, but it does require the use of rules of reasoned deliberation, including openness to and response to public testimony by experts. In brief, the key is 'experts on tap, not necessarily on top'.

danh

September 28, 2012 9:39pm

Man Joe, what you say is so reasonable --- what could be more sensible to scientifically weigh the evidence, have decision making spread across the population, and be open to ideas and rigorous arguments? --- but also so incredibly remote from the way we manage things now. Hope you can advocate for a long, long time.

clefman

September 28, 2012 11:44am

Sirota has put his finger directly on the "give me a break" button regarding most of the GOP candidates. It appears that they need to have people who are never far from a text screen or without a moistened finger to test the prevailing winds.

We are a nation founded by men with good minds, unafraid to use their intellect in the furtherance of the ideal of the many freedoms spoken of in our revered documents; documents constantly under attack by men of lesser aims and mind.

Our nation works best when we are alive, awake and aware, not when we move through life directed by remote controllers with a self-absorbed agenda. We've seen how that works with our drone program in Afghanistan and Iraq to the detriment of our respect in the eyes of the world.