Monday, January 17, 2011

On Leadership: MLK and Obama

In honor of Martin Luther King's birthday, The Grio has identified a list of The 25 Most Influential Black American Leaders of All Time. These kinds of lists are always controversial, but I found it interesting and educational. I hope you'll go take a look.

Melissa Harris-Perry follows up the list with commentary on From MLK to Obama: How we define black leadership. This is because #1 on the list is MLK and Obama is #2. She ponders why that is. I humbly say that her thoughts bear a striking resemblance to what I wrote about Good Crazy.

The close proximity of Dr. King and President Obama at the top of the list makes me wonder how we judge leadership and to ask what these two men share that lead our experts to evaluate both so highly. I believe that one reason Dr. King and President Obama share top billing is because they both insist that means are as important as ends in our efforts to achieve freedom, equality, and a more racially just America...

I believe that it is this crucial similarity that propels both men to the top of our experts' list of black leaders. Dr. King was not victorious in every organizing effort. He often made choices to accommodate opponents. He sometimes cut deals when he thought the best outcome was not possible. He infuriated ideological purists who felt that he too frequently compromised. Certainly, President Obama has not achieved all of his policy goals. He too has anger many who felt that he is too frequently conciliatory. But despite their failures, our experts perceive both King and Obama as worthy of the highest ratings as leaders.

Perhaps this is because both men are leaders who ask us to look beyond the momentary struggle over a particular policy. No matter how critical that policy is to achieving justice, both Dr. King and President Obama remind us that we can only be victorious to the extent that we protect democracy, civility, and ethical engagement with our fellow human beings even as we pursue our goals...

Leaders do not always win, but leaders always call us to believe that we are capable of making something better than what we currently believe is possible. For this ability both Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and President Barack Obama are distinguished as the best among the best.

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