Itβs the bane of public servants that Americans want statesmen and stateswomen β people with the courage to do the right thing for the country despite the personal consequences β but almost routinely punish them for doing just that.
 
            Terry Newell is currently director of his own firm, Leadership for a Responsible Society. His work focuses on values-based leadership, ethics, and decision making. A former Air Force officer, Terry also previously served as Director of the Horace Mann Learning Center, the training arm of the U.S. Department of Education, and as Dean of Faculty at the Federal Executive Institute. Terry is co-editor and author of The Trusted Leader: Building the Relationships That Make Government Work (CQ Press, 2011). He also wrote Statesmanship, Character and Leadership in America (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013) and To Serve with Honor: Doing the Right Thing in Government (Loftlands Press 2015).
All in Statesmanship
Itβs the bane of public servants that Americans want statesmen and stateswomen β people with the courage to do the right thing for the country despite the personal consequences β but almost routinely punish them for doing just that.
What does James Madison, a product of the eighteenth century, have to teach us about the practice of politics in the twenty-first? Simply and profoundly this: he knew how to lose, and he knew how to win.