I’ve written
about the popularity of Labour’s manifesto, which should more
accurately be described as expanding the state rather than ending
austerity. But I thought that Labour would do badly in GE2017 despite
this, because Jeremy Corbyn was so unpopular as a potential Prime
Minister before the campaign.
I still remember
reading many, many years ago about Weber’s three forms
of authority (as we macroeconomists do), and feeling a visceral
distaste for authority due to charisma. Although Weber intended it as
an alternative to authority based on law, I read it as an electorate
choosing their leaders according to their charisma or personality
within a democratic system (the extreme form of which is populism).
It offended my rationalist outlook, and my view about what politics
was about. As Tony Benn used to say
and I believed, politics should be about issues not personalities.
And in my youth it
was possible to believe that authority through charisma was something
advanced democracies had indeed grown out of. After all, Edward Heath
became Prime Minister, Alec Douglas Home almost
beat Wilson and Richard Nixon almost
beat Kennedy. Perhaps at the time
I should have noted that in each case the leader who did well even
though they appeared to lack charisma happened to be from the right.
My view that
advanced democracies had grown out of the need for their leaders to
have charisma fell apart in the age of first Thatcher and Reagan, and
then Blair and Bill Clinton. I also began to see how the right wing
media ruthlessly exploited perceived character flaws. I think Ed
Miliband would have made a fine Prime Minister, and Hillary Clinton a
fine President (both far better than those who beat them). However
their lack of the exceptional charisma of a Blair, Bill Clinton or
Obama allowed their opponents to make mountains over perceived
deficiencies in their character.
Before the 2017 UK
General Election (GE2017) campaign, things seemed to be going the
same way. Labour was unpopular, mainly because Jeremy Corbyn was
extremely unpopular. He had real charisma, but only it seemed among
his loyal supporters. This unpopularity was translated into votes in
the local elections just a month before GE2017. It was for this
reason that the Conservatives decided to run a presidential type of
campaign. So what changed in a few weeks?
Part of the answer
was Labour’s manifesto, which because of the leak (?) a week
before, and because of general election rules for broadcasters, got
extended coverage. It was popular because it was clever: money was
spent on items that would have immediate appeal to the voters who
were likely to respond and vote (rather than what might have been -
in some eyes at least - worthier causes). The decision to borrow only
to invest blunted the normal attack lines, and I suspect many voters
no longer cared too much if ‘the sums didn’t add up’ because
austerity had past its sell by date or they were happy to pay
something towards these items of spending anyway. (Of course this
didn’t stop me getting rather cross
with those who seemed to make a fetish out of the need to balance the
budget.)
Although all this
came as a surprise to some commentators, it did not to me: one of the
things I got right
was that austerity’s appeal was time limited. Just a year ago it
looked like internal divisions would drown out the message. This
didn’t happen because of an impressive, and to me unexpected,
display of unity after Corbyn’s second election. But I was still
concerned that his perceived lack of charisma would trump issues, and
the polls and May local elections did nothing to admonish that fear.
It seemed that although Labour’s policies were popular, their
leadership mattered more.
As Stephen Cushion notes,
this idea that personality trumped issues was often reinforced by
broadcasters using Vox Pops.
So what changed?
Does charisma really not matter any more? Unfortunately I suspect
not. Instead what happened was that voters, particularly
younger voters, discovered another side to Theresa May. May looks
good in controlled situations: soundbites and speeches to the
faithful. When she lost control after the launch of the Conservative
manifesto, she looked evasive and robotic. The independent media, who
tend to pounce on weaknesses, focused on this rather than the ‘old
news’ about Corbyn’s past. [1] What is more, the qualities that
May seemed to lack were exactly those that a much more confident
Corbyn displayed: genuine passion rather than robotic spin. It was
May’s inadequacies that allowed many voters to see Corbyn in a
different light.
If this story is
right, it suggests charisma and personality are still important in
elections. Just look at how well Ruth Davidson did in Scotland. I
continue to think this is unfortunate, because people greatly
overestimate how much they can accurately judge people from limited
contact with them, whether it is in an interview for a job, for a
place
at university or being a prime minister. Cameron exuded confidence
and competence as only the product of a top public school and
Oxbridge can, but his faith in his own abilities did the country
great harm in allowing Brexit to happen. People had decided based on
limited and filtered information that Corbyn was hopeless, and now
(particularly following the Grenfell fire) they can see his
qualities, but I'm not sure they are much nearer knowing whether he will be a good or bad prime minister.
Weber seems
to have had a soft spot for charisma, but he died before Mussolini
and Hitler came to power. I have no doubt that the personality and
abilities of a leader matters. But quite how a politician’s
personality interacts with events to determine whether they make good
for bad decisions is something that is only really possible after the
event (for a brilliant example, see Steve
Richards). I can only think of only one occasion where
I correctly guessed that a politician’s personality made him
totally unsuited to high office, and the fact that millions of people
came to the opposite conclusion about Donald Trump I think makes my
case against charisma.
[1] I think this is
important. The idea that the Labour manifesto and its presentation
were foolproof is incorrect: journalists could have easily run with
confusion over restoring benefit cuts, or over optimistic tax
receipts. But on the whole independent journalists, quite rightly,
chose bigger fish to fry.