Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Hochul has proven herself a master of the political game

- Alan Chartock is professor emeritus at the State University of New York, publisher of the Legislativ­e Gazette and president and CEO of the WAMC Northeast Public Radio Network. Readers can email him at alan@ wamc.org.

I was a college professor for a lot of years and once you’ve been a teacher, there are some things that you never forget.

One of those things was the onerous task of having to grade the work of others. Since we have all had our work evaluated by a higher authority, we know what’s involved and we certainly know the sting of having our work judged as less than what we, ourselves, think it’s worth. Simply, we don’t want to mess up.

There are times, however, when we must assess the work of others. Right now, for example, my job is to review the work of some elected officials in New York State government.

Take Gov. Kathy Hochul.

She is actually doing a fairly good job and we are not hearing a lot of negatives about her. Since politics has been more traditiona­lly known as a male game, it is instructiv­e that New York’s first woman governor is doing so well. It is possible that people are giving her a break because she’s a woman. On the other hand, it’s likely that she has always had many of the qualities that we tend to associate with strong male personalit­ies.

My sense is that Hochul has caught the people’s imaginatio­n not only because she is breaking new ground but also because she is a first-rate politician who has eschewed the usual political competitiv­eness and has garnered the people’s respect. I know that from what I see of her, she has proven herself a master of the game.

Whatever it is that she has in her administra­tive personalit­y, she has certainly made it work and is gaining great credit for what she is doing. I keep my ear close to the ground and do not hear any real grumbling about her administra­tive abilities.

Now let’s face it, there are some things that both men and women in politics have to deal with that might defy our expectatio­ns.

If a woman is a major political executive, it’s likely that she will have a lot of men working for her. At each stage of the supervisor­y process, there is an interactio­nal difference between a man telling a woman subordinat­e what to do and the other way around. I suspect that it should not be that way, but it is.

We are raised by mothers and fathers who quite often set the stage for how we interact with others. I once had an excellent women college president who called me over to a table in our faculty tower where we were both having lunch and gave me a set of very specific orders.

I felt like the mouse who was confronted by the cat but I had no choice but to tell her no. It must have been an important interactio­n because it has stayed in my mind for many, many years.

At that moment I was quite worried that all kinds of meaning might have been attributed to my refusal to abide by her instructio­ns.

I later heard that my president told someone, perhaps as a result of my refusal to go along, that she ought to keep an eye on me. The point here, once again, is that gender can figure into the equation when evaluating personal interactio­ns and even if it is irrelevant to the interactio­n, it will often be perceived as important.

In any case, we have really come a long way and the matter of balance between males and females in the work place has changed, I think, for the better. We are not talking only about sexual tension between males and females, but rather in the long-held assumption among the ill-informed that males make better leaders than females.

It is clear to me, at least, that those of us with mothers, sisters, and wives are ready for the change.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States