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Political Leadership

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Title: Political Leadership


1
Political Leadership
  • Alistair Cole

2
Political leadership
  • A key distinguishing feature within the academic
    literature has been between those advocating
    universal propositions about political
    leadership and those concerned with a more
    limited, usually national, framework
  • Jean Blondels attempt to construct a universal
    model of political leadership proves the
    weaknesses of over-ambitious definitions of
    leadership.
  • Blondel proposes a general model of political
    leadership claimed to be valid for all polities.
    Little account of different systemic contexts
    within which leadership is exercised for
    instance between liberal democratic,
    authoritarian, traditional or military
    leaderships. Extensive coverage but what really
    is being said?

3
Definitions
  • Blondel leadership is ability to make others do
    what they would not otherwise do. Classic face
    of power (Lukes). Leadership is exercise of
    coercive power.
  • Elgie, 'political leadership is best understood
    as the control over the public policy-making
    process by a particular institution'. This limits
    the study of political leadership to one of
    interaction between formal institutions, and
    overlooks or underplays the mobilising aspect of
    individual political action.
  • Charismatic leadership (Weber). Leadership as
    mobilisation
  • Leader-follower relations ( Burns) Leadership
    relational
  • Symbolic leadership (Blondel)
  • Psycho-biographies and socio-psychological
    studies define leadership in terms of personal
    attributes of leaders, typically authoritarian
    personality.
  • Leadership can be all of thesea transversal
    concept which requires framework of analyses to
    allow operationalisation.

4
Framework of analysis 1.
  • Leadership is multidisciplinary. It has attracted
    work in the fields of psychology, management
    studies, organisational theory, and history, as
    well as from political scientists.
  • Within the framework of political science, most
    attention has been centered upon
  • the institutional offices or positions occupied
    by leaders
  • the personality traits associated with
    leadership (what distinguishs leaders from
    routine office-holders, for instance)
  • the political environment or settings within
    which political leaders operate
  • Styles of leadership, both individual and
    collective
  • Leadership as part of broader core executive
    studies
  • Most involve some combination of the personal
    qualities of leaders, their positional strengths
    and weaknesses, and the wider environmental and
    cultural constraints and opportunities that help
    shape their political leadership. Frameworks give
    rise to a number of questions

5
Structure and Agency
  • What is the interplay between structure and
    agency?
  • To what extent are political leaders bound by
    structural and political constraints how far are
    they free agents, able to determine leadership
    goals and policy outcomes?
  • Are certain types of leader (for example the
    caretaker, the authoritarian, the visionary, or
    the coalition broker) suited to certain types of
    environmental setting?
  • Do particular psychological character traits
    (such as an authoritarian personality) predispose
    certain individuals for political leadership?

6
Leadership settingsGermany as a case study
  • Appreciating leadership potential depends first
    and foremost upon understanding the structural
    bases of a given polity.
  • The case of Germany illustrates this well .The
    domestic political setting within which a German
    chancellor functions is far more restricted than
    that of his French or British counterparts.
  • Post-war German political leadership has been
    built upon a political structure which embodies
    the diffusion of power across several
    interlocking institutions.
  • The forces militating against strong leadership
    include the compromises inherent in coalition
    management, the impact of factional politics
    within the governing coalition, the federal
    system, which vests a virtual veto power in the
    hands of state governments and the second
    chamber the prevalence of sectoral corporatism
    as a model of state-group relations, and the
    impact of a particular institutional framework
    designed to dissipate decision-making authority
    across separate, but interdependent
    institutions.
  • These constraints can also become opportunities
    for astute and skilful politicians, but
    leadership constrained by memory.

7
Agency and individuals
  • Personal character traits are an important facet
    of an ability to exercise political leadership.
  • The leadership qualities of decisiveness,
    strength, resolution, risk-taking, vision and
    imagination are differentially distributed,
    irrespective of wider structural circumstances.
  • Different personal skills are appropriate to
    varying leadership styles and circumstances.
    Certain leaders appear to possess personal
    characteristics enabling them to leave their
    permanent imprint upon their offices. the
    examples of Charles de Gaulle in France and
    Konrad Adenuaer in Germany were exemplary in this
    respect.
  • As with the French presidency and de Gaulle, the
    character of the German Chancellorship owes a
    great deal to the legacy of the first Chancellor,
    Adenauer. Adenauer crafted the chancellorship
    into a powerful weapon of executive leadership.

8
Leadership Roles
  • What leadership roles are performed? Successful
    political leadership in complex liberal
    democracies depends upon the ability to perform
    different roles appropriate to variable contexts.
  • The qualities required of a party manager are not
    always the same as those for a governmental
    coordinator the skills required for domestic
    economic management are distinct from those of
    the foreign policy suzerain.
  • The extent to which individual political leaders
    are able to carry out particular roles is
    predicated in part upon the nature of the office
    they occupy Mitterrand and Thatcher performed
    foreign policy roles that were, arguably, not
    available to Chancellor Kohl in the 1980s, on
    account of the constrained leadership setting
    within which German chancellors then operated.
    The structure of the domestic political system is
    one very important dimension of political
    leadership.
  • But roles are not, literally, pre-given. To a
    degree, individuals can determine the roles they
    perform, or even invent new ones. Sarkozy is
    arguably crafting the French presidency into a
    new type of political office

9
Position Presidential Leadership
  • The key principle of a pure presidential system
    (such as the US) is that one individual
    symbolises the political executive, and is
    ultimately responsible for the activities of the
    government in the US, the President in theory
    fulfils this function, although in practice it is
    impossible for the President always to know what
    is going on in his name.
  • The US President combines the functions of Head
    of State and Head of Government. The President is
    elected - by electoral college - and is
    responsible only to the people.
  • Thus, in pure presidential systems, governments
    are responsible to the President alone, and can
    not be overturned by elected Parliaments. They
    will, however, change with a change of
    presidential incumbent.
  • In the US system, there is a separation of
    powers, with legislative, executive and judicial
    branches of government separate from each other
    and providing checks and balances on each others
    operation.
  • In most countries with powerful Presidents,
    however, there is no such pattern of divided
    government and the presidential form equates
    with a powerful form of unchecked and often
    corrupt executive power (the model in Africa,
    for example).

10
PositionParliamentary leadership
  • In parliamentary systems, by contrast, government
    is held to be a collective enterprise
    responsibility for government decisions is
    invested in a collective body known as a cabinet,
    or a Council of ministers.
  • The Prime minister is the foremost personality
    within Cabinet, but decision-making is
    collective. The PM is not directly elected, and
    can be overturned by a negative vote in an
    elected Parliament. In parliamentary systems,
    governments are held to be responsible to elected
    Assemblies, themselves representative of the
    people.
  • In a pure presidential system, such as the US,
    the executive is separate from the legislature
    members of the US government can not be members
    of Congress as well. In a parliamentary system,
    such as the UK, the executive is drawn from the
    legislature members of the government are first
    elected as members of Parliament. In nearly all
    European states, there is a fusion of powers,
    rather than a strict separation.

11
Semi-presidential system
  • The semi-presidential system combines features of
    the presidential and the parliamentary
  • A semi-presidential system combines a directly
    elected President and a government responsible to
    parliament.
  • Francois (2008) Frances semi-presidential
    system equates with the lack of political
    responsibility of the core executive leader, the
    President, who is de facto unaccountable.
  • Executive drawn in part only from elected
    Assembly. Rule of incompatibility. Nomination by
    President of personalities who have not been
    elected
  • A model that is not really for export?

12
Political Leadership in comparative context (1)
formal constitutional resources
  • Proposition 1 formal constitutional powers are a
    necessary, but not sufficient component of
    leadership
  • the powers vested by the constitution on the core
    executive leader
  • Power of nomination
  • Powers of selection and dismissal of ministers
  • Limits on terms in office?
  • Specific constitutional responsibilities, e.g. in
    defence
  • Limitations to exercise of core executive
    authority? EG the guarantee of individual
    ministerial autonomy in the FRG.

13
Political Leadership in comparative context (2)
role of party system
  • Proposition 2 .Role of party system in producing
    homogeneous versus coalition governments. The
    strong prime minister at the head of a
    disciplined party majority is likely to exercise
    tighter control over government than the
    broker-style leader of a coalition of five or so
    parties
  • The nature of the relationship between government
    and governing party/coalition is vital. The
    colonisation of important ministries by a
    coalition partner (e.g. Welfare by Social
    democrats in Germany) can frustrate the claim by
    the premier to exercise political leadership.
    Party political and organisational variables can
    conflict
  • Style of leadership likely to be strongly
    influenced by the party system. Are brokerage
    skills rewarded, for example, or are is the
    relationship framed in terms of providential
    leader and subordination? There are no absolute
    rules, but behavuoural observations.

14
Political Leadership in comparative context (3)
Nature of elective mandate
  • Proposition 3. Direct election and elective
    legitimacy. The core executive leader who has
    been directly elected (such as the French
    President) enjoys an additional elective
    legitimacy by comparison to parliamentary prime
    ministers. French President remains in office for
    the duration of a mandate and can not be
    overturned by a party or parliamentary revolt,
    unlike in Germany, UK or Italy.
  • On the other hand, direct presidential elections
    do not automatically invest officeholders with
    increased power, as the Portuguese or Finnish
    examples demonstrate.
  • New democracies in central and eastern Europe
    tempted by institutional design of the
    semi-presidential system, but in practice have
    evolved into parliamentary regimes.

15
Political Leadership in comparative context (4)
Elections and government formation
  • Proposition 4 Elections and government formation.
  • The closer the link between electoral victory
    and government formation, the stronger the
    position of the office holder.
  • The strength of the British PM (and, for that
    matter, the German Chancellor) usually relates to
    the fact that s/he has led the ruling party to a
    victorious general election.
  • There is- usually - a strong relationship
    between general elections and government
    formation, even in case of the Grand coalition.
  • In Italy, or France, this relationship is less
    apparent - which limits the political prestige of
    the Prime minister
  • Thus, Helmut Kohl, Margaret Thatcher or Tony
    Blair all led their parties to successive
    electoral victories, thereby strengthening their
    leadership positions. Although Thatcher and
    Blair was eventually overturned by a party
    revolt, and Kohls leadership threatened to go
    the same way, there is no doubt that Kohl and
    Thatcher had more authority and power than a
    string of Italian premiers whose occupancy of the
    premiership was decided by party committee in
    between election periods.
  • After all, who can remember Spaldolini in Italy?

16
Political Leadership in comparative context (5)
longevity of office
  • longevity in office. This is a precondition to
    exercising effective political leadership..
  • Learning leadership, exploiting opportunities
  • But experience also demonstrates that it is
    extremely rare for any one leader to stay in
    office more than 10 years or soThe nature of
    obstacles in the democratic process

17
Political Leadership in comparative context (6)
Relations within and beyond the core executive
  • Political leadership is behavioural in part a
    function of the relations of political leaders
    with other decision-making actors, both within
    and outside of the core executive.
  • Relations between Prime ministers, Finance
    ministers, spending ministries often tense
    crystallises tensions at a macro level
    duplicated by rivalries between bureaucratic
    divisions
  • Government competition for scarce resources.
    Nature of bureaucratic resources, rules and
    regulation. Who has the best expertise? What
    rules govern access to these resources? How are
    promotions managed in the civil service? What is
    role of political appointments or spoils
    systems
  • Leadership is positional relational Powerful
    external relations can strengthen a PMs internal
    standing.

18
Political Leadership in comparative context (7)
constraints and resources
  • the existence or otherwise of institutional and
    political counter-weights to strong leadership
    (such as constitutional courts, a written
    constitution, or a constraining party system).
  • The role of Assemblies and especially
    constitutional courts is critical importance here
  • The rise of the EU regulatory state and the legal
    order basis of the European Union and the ECJ,
    has provided a powerful check on unbridled
    executive authority.

19
Germany 1.
  • German Chancellors have generally proved strong
    leaders
  • In Germany the post-war period has seen the
    emergence of a strong political office in the
    form of the Chancellor. It was believed by the
    allies that the absense of strong,
    institutionalised leadership had been partly
    responsible for the rise of Nazism. For this
    reason, it was important to strengthen the
    Chancellor at the expense of the President- whose
    capacity for intrigue had to be broken. The
    pre-eminence of the Chancellor was recognised in
    the Basic Law (Guideline principles) strengthened
    by the following provisions
  • 1. He can not be dismissed by the President of
    the Republic (unlike in France)
  • 2. he can only be dismissed by the Bundestag in
    the event of a vote of constructive no
    confidence being passed against him. This
    involves an absolute majority against the
    incumbent chancellor in the Bundestag - an
    unlikely occurrence except for a shift in policy
    alliances. The CVNC has been a German
    constitutional export Spain and Poland have
    followed suit.

20
Germany 2.
  • The German Chancellor who has led his party/
    coalition to victory in an election finds himself
    in a strong position relatively disciplined
    party support focus of media attention during
    elections.
  • This position reinforced by the Convention that
    he should be appointed for the duration of a
    legislature. The only exceptions to this rule
    have been Adenauer's retirement in 1963, and the
    resignations of Brandt, Schmidt in mid-office and
    Schroders 2005 dissolution.
  • Between 1949 and 2007, Germany had shown more
    stability of personnel than in any other of the
    countries considered it has had only 8
    Chancellors during this period (Adenauer, Erhard,
    Kiesinger, Brandt, Schmidt, Kohl, GS and AM).

21
Constraints on a German Chancellor
  • According to the principle of Ressortprinzip,
    enshrined in the Basic law, each Minister is
    responsible for running his own department, and
    the Chancellor can not order a Minister to run
    department in a different way (unlike in the UK,
    eg).
  • The existence of coalition partners constrains
    the Chancellor, to the extent that bargains must
    be struck which other leaders might dispense
    with.
  • And fixed-term parliaments effectively make it
    extremely difficult for Chancellors to dissolve
    the Bundedstag, in order to seek general
    elections at favourable moments this is one of
    the reasons which makes the British and French
    leaders so powerful.
  • As measured by this checklist, in their domestic
    settings German Chancellors occupy a median
    position amongst west European leaders. In
    practice, there is no real equivalent in Germany
    of the French or British ministerial reshuffle
    traditions of ministerial autonomy and of
    coalition capture of particular portfolios are
    far too strong for this.

22
Italy
  • Italy During the first Italian Republic, the
    Italian premier generally had only a minor role
    to play, but the office strengthened under
    Berlusconi and Prodi.
  • Until 1994, Italian governments lasted for less
    than one year on average. Ministers were imposed
    upon an Italian premier by considerations of
    party and factional balance within the ruling
    coalition.
  • The means at the disposal of an Italian premier
    for co-ordinating governmental action were
    derisory, despite a large bureaucratic apparatus
    under direct control of the premier.
  • Italian premiers were so weak because they
    presided over coalition governments, navigated
    between divided political parties, were
    responsible to a parliament determined to assert
    its control, and in general did not benefit from
    a strong relationship between election results
    and government formation.
  • The post-1994 Italian regime has gone some way to
    rebalancing this, with the governments of Prodi
    and Berlusconi creating a bipolar competition
    assisted by the majoritarian electoral system and
    providing stronger, though deeply contested and
    still coalition-dependent leadership.
  • Extent of the role of institutional engineering
    in creating political outcomes.

23
Britain 1.
  • UK The British Premier, by any standards,
    occupies a key leadership position within the
    family of west European nations.
  • British prime ministers have often appeared in a
    stronger leadership position than their European
    counterparts. There is a close linkage between
    the leadership of an electorally majoritarian
    political party and the exercise of the office of
    Prime minister.
  • Election campaigns are centred around the
    personalities of rival party leaders, as much as
    the policies espoused by their parties the
    success of Tony Blair in 1997 was testament to
    this. There is also a close relationship between
    electoral success and government formation.
    Strengthened by the majoritarian effects of the
    first-past-the post electoral system, elections
    tend to produce single party majorities.
  • Successful Prime ministers have usually been able
    to rely on disciplined party support. But
    Thatcher, Major, Blair all constrained by their
    parties.

24
Britain 2.
  • Unlike their German, Italian and French
    counterparts, they have not been tightly
    constrained by a written constitution outlining
    their powers and responsibilities indeed, the
    doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty removes
    most checks and balances on a British premiers
    use of executive authority, on condition that a
    parliamentary majority is retained.
  • British premiers have powerful sources of
    patronage at their disposal each recent
    incumbent has made regular use of their freedom
    to hire and fire ministerial colleagues. At the
    height of her activism in July 1989, for
    instance, Mrs Thatcher replaced or reshuffled
    12 out of 21 Cabinet ministers.
  • The departure of Margaret Thatcher in 1990 or
    Blair in 2007 also revealed the limits to prime
    ministerial power in Britain, however a
    disillusioned party will not tolerate a leader
    with whom it has lost faith, even when this is an
    incumbent prime minister.
  • While ministerial autonomy is less manifest than
    in the German case, any British Prime minister
    must be careful not to ride roughshod over
    powerful ministers. An embattled premier such as
    Blair could not afford to lose senior
    ministerial colleagues hence the effectiveness
    of the Chancellor of the Exchequer Clarke

25
France
  • France Along with the British premier, the French
    President is a serious contender for the key
    executive office in western Europe.
  • The President is directly elected for a five year
    period direct election confers a status on the
    French President which his colleagues find
    difficult to match.
  • Until the quinquennat reforms of 2000, the
    presidential term of office was longer than that
    of any of his counterparts. Whatever the French
    constitution says, French Presidents have enjoyed
    considerable freedom of manoeuvre in selecting
    and dismissing prime ministers and ministers and
    in personalising control over core policy
    choices.
  • French Presidents dispose of powerful sources of
    political patronage, and most Presidents have
    been backed by solid parliamentary majorities.
  • In instances of cohabitation (1986-88, 1993-95
    1997-) the prime minister has become the chief
    executive leader, with uncontested control over
    domestic policy, but having to contend with
    continuing presidential involvement in the
    presidential sector of foreign affairs, defence
    and European integration.
  • As in the other systems surveyed, individual
    ministers can occupy pivotal positions, but they
    are less secure in their tenure than in Germany

26
Poland and Czech Republic
  • Czech Republic and Poland. In both cases, early
    transition saw the development of strong
    Presidents.. but , faced with the accession
    process and problems of political majroty
    building, Prime ministers, at the head of
    shifting party coalitions, have emerged as much
    stronger figures, with the corresponding decline
    of the Presidency.
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