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Thread: Brian Cowen a failed Leader?

  1. #1
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    Brian Cowen a failed Leader?

    Excellent article on Irish Indo's today;

    BRIAN Cowen received a sympathetic and encouraging start when he became Taoiseach last May.

    He had the unanimous support of the Fianna Fail Party and organisation. The press gave him an almost ecstatic welcome, parading his supposed merits and strengths and seeing him as head-and-shoulders over any possible rivals. I differed from this, lamenting the fact that there had not been a leadership contest -- always of value in defining a political party's future -- and questioning the poisoned chalice offered by his predecessor.

    I questioned what I saw as far too extravagant praise for a career of no great distinction or achievement, as well as a period in the Department of Finance that had not looked sufficiently to the future. He had warned about looming clouds over the economy in 2006, but had done nothing.

    Then came the setbacks. He failed over the Lisbon Treaty, and ran a poor, misconceived campaign which he thought would be a walkover. In this he displayed seriously bad judgment. He then compounded this lack of leadership. The first thing he did was to blame others, even during the campaign. He did this notably to Fine Gael, for not pulling their weight, and to Labour for not being united enough.

    He brought forward the Budget in a quite dramatic way and then fell on his face, making a massive mess of the things that had been decided -- one wonders how involved the Government really were in this, and who in fact called the shots, Lenihan or Cowen, or no one? It turned out to have been a foolish piece of false energy and determination.

    It was tied up with three other issues, so that the sense of his inadequacy spread like sickness among the public generally, as well as within the public service. These issues were, firstly, the absurdity of a social partnership still trying to organise public pay, involving increases, when the country was in a state of near panic over the economic and banking crisis. We needed to bring public pay back into the Oireachtas where it could be reduced.

    Secondly, there was the crucial issue of public service reform, the outline of which should have preceded the Budget, letting its broad objectives be shaped within that Budget's strategy. As it happened, this did not matter, and would not have happened anyway, since the Reform Package was such a dismally unoriginal set of flaccid ideas which Cowen promptly, and stupidly, consigned to a committee. This is a group of very senior figures. Their tried and tested safety has shown up, more than anything else, that we have no new minds working in this vital area. They will report next summer. The Government, after the summer break, will think about the proposals, and at the very least a further year will be lost.

    Thirdly and separately there was the outrageous fact that we have created up to 800 hived-off State enterprises, costing massively more money than their work would have cost if contained within the conventional civil and public service framework, and we need to re-absorb them and save hundreds of millions by so doing.

    This needed urgent attention backed by legislation. Little did I know, when I wrote of it in general terms, last week, that it would blast its way on to the front pages with the FAS scandal.

    Even less could I have predicted what a complete mess of it Brian Cowen would make, supporting the FAS CEO whose resignation he should have sought immediately. If that is how he handles a scandal, what hope is there of him addressing straightforward but necessary reform. The awful reality is that Brian Cowen is no leader. He doesn't just lack leadership potential; he lacks all the essentials of leadership.

    From personal experience I can cite, from the leaders we have had, over the past half-century, those who have been better. With the possible exception of Bertie Ahern and Albert Reynolds, all others qualify.

    Leaders need courage, consistency, determination. They need to have an overall strategy and stick to it. They need to make palatable what they believe in. If major restructuring is needed they have to implement it with clarity and conviction, possibly also with speed, in Ireland's case.

    Leadership involves choosing a good team. Cowen has chosen badly. His closest ally and Tanaiste, Mary Coughlan, has been a serious disappointment. Brian Lenihan is disappointingly slack in strategic definition of what he is doing and, with Cowen, guilty of an appalling misjudgment over his first Budget.

    Leaders need to communicate persuasively. They have to present their strategies in human and credible terms.

    Leaders must know how to handle those who serve them, how to weed out the lazy, the bad and the corrupt, how to replace them with fresh talent.

    For six months Brian Cowen has fumbled his way forward, making mistake after mistake, and failing repeatedly to make sense at all of our future. We know it is going to be bad. He makes it worse by his indecision. There is no strategy and no courage.

    barnold@independent.ie

    - Bruce Arnold

    Is it time for Biffo to hang up his boots? Or should it be done for him?

  2. #2
    Politics.ie Member Supermanpolitician's Avatar
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    The best Bruce since Springsteen.

    Great article.

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    problem

    you used 2 words: Failed and Leader

    only 1 of those words applies to Clowen, that is Failed.

    he was never a Leader, bully boy yes, Leader of Men? never - that sort of fatness/obesity compromises ones testosterone levels

    Clowens Estrogen levels must be through the roof

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    I had nothing against him when he became Taoiseach, but the budget really showed his lack of leadership among FF

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    Politics.ie Regular PhoenixIreland's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Crimo View Post
    Excellent article on Irish Indo's today;

    BRIAN Cowen received a sympathetic and encouraging start when he became Taoiseach last May.

    He had the unanimous support of the Fianna Fail Party and organisation. The press gave him an almost ecstatic welcome, parading his supposed merits and strengths and seeing him as head-and-shoulders over any possible rivals.
    I don't remember them doing that.
    All I remember is them saying he was inevitable and undefeatable, I don't remember anyone saying why, what were they're reasons?

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    Politics.ie Regular TradCat's Avatar
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    The good thing about Cowen is that his lack of skills, charm and charisma allow us to see what's going on more clearly. People remained loyal to Haughey while he robbed them and Ahern was a highly skilled political operator. But with Cowen we see a true representative of the political class who live so well at our expense.

    From the ridiculously over-paid councillors through the largely useless senators gobdaw backbenchers and witless ministers and woeful President we have voted ourselves into a mess.

    We have to get smarter about politics. All the rip-offs junkets, bad planning, corruption and failure comes from the political system and it's our fault. With Cowen and Kenny we can at least start to see that. If they are the leaders why are we paying the rest of them so well.

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    Quote Originally Posted by TradCat View Post
    The good thing about Cowen is that his lack of skills, charm and charisma allow us to see what's going on more clearly. People remained loyal to Haughey while he robbed them and Ahern was a highly skilled political operator. But with Cowen we see a true representative of the political class who live so well at our expense.

    From the ridiculously over-paid councillors through the largely useless senators gobdaw backbenchers and witless ministers and woeful President we have voted ourselves into a mess.

    We have to get smarter about politics. All the rip-offs junkets, bad planning, corruption and failure comes from the political system and it's our fault. With Cowen and Kenny we can at least start to see that. If they are the leaders why are we paying the rest of them so well.
    I think the important thing to come out is that - Cowan is a good politician but a poor leader, can't pick a good team, can't make decisions whereas Kenny is a good leader but a poor politician, he doesn't come across well on TV etc but at least picks talent and gets them working together...

  8. #8
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    I said to the wife the other day when I saw Brian Cowen on the TV -

    "Dosen't he look very tired". He is visibly overweight and does not look in the best of health.

    Lets face facts Brian Cowen was only elected to the Dail following the untimley death of his father Bernard Cowen. Brian has excelled at nothing and exibits no great leadership talents. He is totally out of his depth is his current role. He is nowhere near Taoiseach material and for the sake of the country he should be replaced as a matter of urgency.

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    Quote Originally Posted by aggressivesecularist View Post
    Please don't cut and paste. Post a link.
    Constructive post......thank you

  10. #10
    Politics.ie Member baldur0300's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Crimo View Post
    Constructive post......thank you
    It's site rules and good practise to comply with copyright law
    “Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen” - Albert Einstein

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