Mavericks Don't Lead

The reason John McCain is ten points behind Barack Obama is, ironically, one of the main reasons people want to vote for him -- he's a maverick.
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The reason John McCain is ten points behind Barack Obama is, ironically, one of the main reasons people want to vote for him -- he's a maverick. A Senate maverick who has played that role for more than 25 years becomes a self-anointed critic of other people's ideas. McCain's greatest asset is his ability to jettison hare-brained Congressional proposals and policies that don't make common sense. But critics are not creators. They rarely write great novels, invent new technologies, or come up with a great business idea. And that's McCain's failure. He's a one-man Greek chorus, devoid of the kind of ideas and vision that come easily to natural born leaders.

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Mavericks are nonconformists. They pride themselves on going it alone. And even though McCain has reached across the aisle to convince others to join his dissent, he's an unlikely leader of a team of people who would be inspired by him. Leadership cries out for vision, and those who have been in the Senate for too many years probably don't have what it takes to be president. If they did, they would have broken out years ago.

Sarah Palin calls herself a maverick because she overturned long-standing policies in Alaska. She prides herself on having an independent voice that serves her constituency, and she may have done a good job in a state that does not reflect many or any of the issues that confront the lower 48. But after all the legislation is overturned, after all the taxes are lowered, after the bridge from nowhere is no longer a story, where are the ideas? What's the vision? Two mavericks do not make one leader.

The difference between the two campaigns is the difference between the critic and the creator. Obama may not deliver on his vision, but at least he has one. He's addressed the issues as a leader of a successful business operation should -- keeping his "customers" front and center and offering solutions that he believes they need and want.. He's eschewed the critic's role in favor of the inventor. He's put himself on the line by exposing his values, his policies, and his ideas to people who will either mock them or embrace them.

At a time when this country is hungry for the can-do spirit that made the country great in the first place, Obama's ten point lead may be more than an election prophecy. It may be a cry to reclaim our future.

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