Leaders without power at mercy of currents
THE President’s dream was always the same. It was dark, barely enough light for him to see that he was in the middle of a mighty river. The boat he was standing in had no oars, no sail and no rudder. It was borne forward by the power of the river’s fearsome currents.
The President had no means of determining his craft’s course. The banks on either side were dim shapes in the darkness. He was alone — at the river’s mercy.
Abraham Lincoln related this recurring dream to his closest confidantes on more than one occasion.
It would come to him at those moments in his presidency (186065) when events were driving the United States inexorably towards a crucial moment of decision. Since he was president during the bloodsoaked years of the American Civil War, these usually took the form of great and decisive battles. The dream, he said, came to him in the summer of 1863 — just days before the tideturning Battle of Gettysburg.
Lincoln’s recurring dream is a powerful evocation of the political leader’s lonely and, at times, terrifying responsibility.
Those of us who are spared the agonies of lifeanddeath decisionmaking all too easily assume that the people in charge are just that — in charge. We imagine them issuing their commands and reality dutifully complying. How else could we think it right and proper to blame our politicians when things go wrong? They told us they would fix the problems by which our world is beset, and yet the problems remain. Who else should we blame?
The true experience of leadership, however, as Lincoln’s dream makes clear, could not be further from the average voter’s fanciful notions of command and control. So many things are happening at once that forming a clear picture of where you are and what you should be doing is impossible. If you ever possessed the means of driving and steering the situation you are in, they have long since been lost. All you can feel beneath you is the sheer, ungovernable power of the events carrying you forward. All you can do is peer blindly into the failing light and do your best to remain upright.
The Coalition Government’s ‘‘document dump’’ of two Fridays ago bears out the metaphorical truth of Lincoln’s recurring dream. Contained within its more than 2000 pages is the story of how New Zealand’s Prime Minister, her senior Cabinet colleagues and the country’s leading civil servants grappled with the smoke and fog of the unfolding Covid19 pandemic.
The picture that emerges is one of confusion bordering on panic; decisionmaking undertaken in extreme haste and with nothing like enough reliable information. It depicts a system that barely coped and institutions that came perilously close to failing.
But it is also a story of unflagging human dedication and prodigious energy. A casestudy of the curious magic that emerges from sustained collective effort on others’ behalf.
Most of all, however, it’s the story of a handful of people who absolutely had to keep their footing and who did not fall. Almost as if the impersonal currents propelling them forward sensed their courage and kept the boat steady.
Does Jacinda Ardern, like Abraham Lincoln, wake in the dark watches of the night still enveloped in the terrors of lifeand death decisionmaking? Maybe — maybe not.
She’s a 21stcentury prime minister, not so susceptible, perhaps, to the deep religious feeling and romanticism that was such a feature of 19th century life. But she is also human and therefore prey to what dreams as may come, unbidden, to the sleeping mind.
Like Lincoln’s last dream. To his wife, Mary, he described being alone in a White House grown uncharacteristically still and quiet. He moved through the mansion’s brightly lit but empty rooms towards the sound of distant sobbing. Finally, in the East Room, he came upon a corpse, lying upon a catafalque and guarded by Union soldiers.
Lincoln heard himself asking: ‘‘Who is dead in the White House?’’ One of the soldiers made reply: ‘‘The President — killed by an assassin!’’ A heartwrenching wail of sorrow rose from the gathered mourners.
In the days that remained before his visit to Ford’s Theatre, where Lincoln would be killed by an assassin, the President was haunted by this grim presentiment of his death. He could not, however, avoid his fate. Leaders never can.