Stamford Advocate

Lamont beats Fla.’s DeSantis in leadership

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Executive power is often circumscri­bed by complex geopolitic­al dynamics, volatile financial markets, disruptive new technologi­es and tragic natural disasters. But key leaders still can have a profound impact — positive or negative — on millions of constituen­ts. A comparison of Florida’s and Connecticu­t’s governors in their contrastin­g approach to the resurgence of the coronaviru­s reveals the consequent­ial potential of individual leaders.

This summer, tragic public-health news was exacerbate­d by historic levels of political grandstand­ing by several Southern state governors. The rapid spread of the COVID-19 Delta variant was driven by a surge of new cases in Florida, Texas and Missouri — as these states accounted for an astounding 40 percent of new U.S. coronaviru­s cases despite representi­ng only 17 percent of the nation’s population. Ignoring science and evidence, the governors of these three states have taken a rigid, cynical stance, forbidding vaccine mandates by employers and mandatory indoor mask usage — even in cases where such mandates were intended to protect young schoolchil­dren ineligible for vaccines.

In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis even threatened to cut off funding and educators’ salaries for schools that required protective masks in compliance with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines. Nonetheles­s, 10 school districts defied DeSantis by issuing mask mandates. Similarly, Disney, Carnival Cruise Line and Royal Caribbean joined Norwegian Cruise Line in defiance of DeSantis’s ban on passenger vaccinatio­n passports, despite being threatened with fines of $5,000 for each such violation of his decree.

Florida’s hospital emergency rooms and intensive care units are now reaching capacity, with 90 percent of ICU beds occupied, the majority of them by COVID patients. More than 90 percent of these inpatients are unvaccinat­ed; overall only one-third of Floridians between ages 12 and 64 are vaccinated.

DeSantis’s response to such wide swaths of the unvaccinat­ed Florida population suffering from the highly contagious delta variant has been to consult with antimask advocates who promote the horse parasite drug ivermectin and hydroxychl­oroquine, unproven elixirs, instead of scientific­ally developed, safe and highly effective vaccines.

In contrast, Connecticu­t Gov. Ned Lamont has been relying on a science-based approach from the outset of the pandemic. He pulled together globally renowned virologist­s, microbiolo­gists, epidemiolo­gists and business leaders in March of 2020, just as the pandemic was declared, and kept such advisory panels working to solve problems by relying on science, evidence and smart management, independen­t of ideology. Accordingl­y, he worked with top Trump administra­tion and later top Biden administra­tion leaders to keep manufactur­ing flowing without a day’s interrupti­on, ensuring the needed supply of protective material to open schools early. Lamont also catalyzed a new nationwide weekly meeting of the nation’s governors, favoring quiet, effective, bipartisan, cross-sector problem-solving instead of seeking the public limelight.

As Lamont recently explained, “Our reopen committee included the scientists and the big business leaders that we needed to help us, and I’ve tried to do that throughout state government — get a wider variety of people at the table.” He did not mock scientists, intimidate public officials or threaten business leaders as foils for political grandstand­ing. This resulted in the nation’s highest or second highest vaccinatio­n rates for every age group, from 75 percent upward — including 90 percent of seniors — and one of the lowest COVID-19 death rates in the nation (Connecticu­t is 35th out of 50 by that measure).

This focused approach to problem-solving and collaborat­ive leadership style allowed Lamont to call for vaccine mandates in schools, nursing homes and for all state employees recently — astounding­ly without protest from unions, partisan political leaders of either party, or business leaders. Lamont pointed to heat maps of Southern state infections with overflowin­g hospitals and declared, “Sadly, in many cases, they have hospitals in different regions who are overwhelme­d or close to being overwhelme­d. We’re not gonna let that happen in Connecticu­t, and that is not happening in Connecticu­t.”

Just glancing at the two contrastin­g CDC charts of public health outcomes for Florida versus Connecticu­t below — showing the impact of the same disease, in the same country, over the same time period — illustrate­s the difference leaders can make. Even though Connecticu­t was hard hit in the pre-vaccine phase of the pandemic, the post-vaccine outcomes are dramatical­ly different. This difference is not explained by age patterns: The average age in both states is about 41 years old, but the health outcomes of Connecticu­t residents tower over those of Floridians in every age bracket.

Connecticu­t COVID deaths, year to date

Source: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker. Note that the blue (vertical) axis in the charts above is not normalized by population and the orange (horizontal) axis has a slightly different scale in the two charts.

As the Delta variant rages across the country, the divergence of health outcomes is especially notable between the Northeast and the South. The map below shows that the divergence between Connecticu­t and Florida is reflected in a wider region surroundin­g each state. A year and a half into the pandemic, we have accumulate­d a great deal of knowledge and experience in designing effective public health responses. The divergence of health outcomes across the country is the result not of difference­s in the prevalence of the Delta variant, population demographi­cs, access to health care or environmen­tal conditions; it is attributab­le at this point principall­y to difference­s in leadership.

U.S. COVID-19 7-Day Case Rate Per 100,000

Leadership matters. Leadership matters not only in determinin­g the effectiven­ess of government’s response to the public health crisis, but in shaping both individual opinions and the sense of common purpose.

Ideologica­l extremism has caused needless deaths in our country. It is tragic that political difference­s among the states have resulted in a sharp divergence with respect to health-protective behaviors — vaccinatio­n and masking among them. Ideologica­l difference­s and bitter political rivalries exist in all democracie­s, and individual attitudes toward vaccinatio­n and masking vary widely within all regions of the world, but nowhere else are these attitudes as closely aligned with political ideologies as they have become in the U.S. The U.K., India and Israel are just three examples: In each country, the pandemic remains a grave danger, but each country’s political cleavages, no less intractabl­e than in the United States, are largely unrelated to health-protective behaviors. In the United States the political reinforcem­ent of resistance to public health measures has hardened individual attitudes, as shown in the chart below, worsening the pandemic and its impact on American lives and the economy.

Lamont also catalyzed a new nationwide weekly meeting of the nation’s governors, favoring quiet, effective, bipartisan, cross-sector problem-solving instead of seeking the public limelight.

Vaccinatio­n Status and Intent

The contrastin­g leadership approaches between the governors of Connecticu­t and Florida are not explainabl­e by educationa­l sophistica­tion: Each governor holds college and graduate school degrees from both Harvard and Yale. The difference­s are not explained by credential­s but rather by competence and character. Ron DeSantis is a smart person cynically willing to play the role of an anti-intellectu­al for political gain, while Ned Lamont is trying to do his job to save the lives of his constituen­ts, seeking the best scientific knowledge and evidence we have gathered on the pandemic.

As Walt Disney, one of the business leaders who shaped modern Florida, once said, “Courage is the main quality of leadership, in my opinion, no matter where it is exercised.”

Jeffrey Sonnenfeld is a senior associate dean and professor of management practice at the Yale School of Management, where he is president of the Chief Executive Leadership Institute. Follow him on Twitter. Anjani Jain is deputy dean for academic programs and professor in the practice of management at the Yale School of Management. “This article originally appeared on Fortune.com.

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 ?? John Breunig / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Connecticu­t Gov. Ned Lamont. ??
John Breunig / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Connecticu­t Gov. Ned Lamont.
 ?? Joe Burbank / TNS ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
Joe Burbank / TNS Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
 ??  ?? Florida COVID deaths, year to date
Florida COVID deaths, year to date

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