Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

In praise of Washington insiders

The people who are showing us what public service looks like

- David Brooks

Let me tell you a secret. The public buildings of Washington are filled with very good people working hard for low pay and the public good. There are thousands of them and they are very much like the Foreign Service officers that we’ve seen testifying at the impeachmen­t hearings: William Taylor, George Kent, Marie Yovanovitc­h and Fiona Hill.

These public servants tend to be self-effacing and deeply knowledgea­ble about some small realm of public policy. They’re generally not all that interested in partisan politics but are deeply committed to the process and substance of good government. Whenever I get to sit in on off-the-record meetings at this or that federal agency, I’m impressed by the quality, profession­alism and basic goodness of the people there.

We don’t celebrate these people. Trumpian conservati­ves say that Washington insiders are unelected bureaucrat­s, denizens of the swamp, the cesspool or a snake pit. Some progressiv­es call Washington insiders the establishm­ent, the power elite, the privileged structures of the status quo.

Everybody who runs for office wants to be seen as an outsider and condemns the insiders. It is times like these when we realize how much we need them.

At this month’s hearings, the civil servant witnesses answering questions inspired a lot more confidence than the elected officials who were asking them. Why are they so impressive? It’s precisely because they are Washington insiders. The witnesses have worked in a long line of institutio­ns — the State Department, the World Bank, the Brookings Institutio­n, the National Security Council.

For all their flaws, these institutio­ns possess what political scientist Hugh Heclo called “sedimented deposits” of inherited knowledge. If you are a Foreign Service officer long enough, you learn to think like a Foreign Service officer. You absorb the skills, practices and moral codes you need to do the work well. When someone breaks the code, you know immediatel­y, and if you are brave enough, like the whistleblo­wer, you move to defend the code.

When public servants enter government, they shed their private interests to serve a public role. A great question of the Trump years is whether our institutio­ns can survive a president who is incapable of thinking outside his own private interest. Donald Trump uses public office as a gold mine to extract personal advantage.

As Yuval Levin writes in his profound forthcomin­g book, “A Time to Build,” Mr. Trump is an example of a person who wasn’t formed by an institutio­n. He is selfcreate­d and self-enclosed. He governs as a perpetual outsider, tweeting insults to members of his own

Cabinet. At its best, the impeachmen­t process is an attempt to protect our institutio­ns from his inability to obey the rules.

The wider disease here is “outsideris­m” itself. For a half-century our culture has celebrated the rebel, not the organizati­on man; the free individual, not the institutio­nalist. That’s fine and in many cases good, but over the decades this outsider pose has hardened into an immature cynicism: Everybody’s corrupt. No one is to be trusted.

“The populism of this moment in our politics is fundamenta­lly antinomian, mistrustfu­l of authority, and cynical about all claims to integrity,” Mr. Levin writes in “A Time to Build.” “Our age combines a populism that insists all of our institutio­ns are rigged against the people with an identity politics that rejects institutio­nal commitment­s and a celebrity culture that chafes against all structure and constraint.”

All around the world voters are electing comedians, celebritie­s and outsider performers to high office. All around the world people are responding to demagogues who tell them that our problems are easy to solve if we just get rid of the bad people. Everywhere rulebreake­rs like Mr. Trump, Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Nicolas Maduro are in power and corruption is in the air.

People have messed-up theories of how you do social change. On the right, many think that you need to elect some authoritar­ian strongman who will whip everybody into shape. On the left, many put their faith in social movements, without explaining how social movements are going to write and pass legislatio­n.

In reality, institutio­ns are the only vehicles for legislativ­e change. That’s because they are the way to wield power safely. They have rules and structures and norms precisely because power is so dangerous when it is wielded by a lone strongman or by a mob.

People have lost faith in institutio­ns for some very good reasons, and the need to reform them is urgent. But the disenchant­ment is overblown and self-destructiv­e. We don’t pay enough attention to all the planes that take off and land safely. We underestim­ate the value of experience. As Mr. Heclo writes in “On Thinking Institutio­nally,” “It is when you deal with someone who does not perform in a ‘profession­al’ manner that you learn to appreciate those who do.”

Watching Messrs. Taylor and Kent, I had a feeling of going back in time. Why did it feel so strange? It was because I was looking at people who are not self-centered. They’ve dedicated themselves to the organizati­on that formed them, and which they serve. David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

 ?? Getty Images ?? The top U.S. diplomat to Ukraine, William B. Taylor Jr., right, and deputy assistant secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs George P. Kent, left, are sworn in Nov. 13 to testify before Congress.
Getty Images The top U.S. diplomat to Ukraine, William B. Taylor Jr., right, and deputy assistant secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs George P. Kent, left, are sworn in Nov. 13 to testify before Congress.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States