Courage vs. Subservience – Liz Cheney and Elise Stefanik

Photo by Michael Schofield on UnsplashLiz

Representative Liz Cheney made a choice yesterday and she did it alone. There was no pandering to power, no one standing by her side at the podium. She took what I wrote about in my Harvard Business Review article “Courage as a Skill” – a spear-in-the-sand move.

Spear-in-the-sand situations require that you weigh your belief in a cause against the risks involved. Such situations are rare: They occur when negotiation is difficult or impossible, open minds are hard to find, and doing nothing is simply not an option.

John McCain defined courage as a brief, singular occurrence: “that rare moment of unity between conscience, fear, and action, when something deep within us strikes the flint of love, of honor, of duty, to make the spark that fires our resolve.” Courage is rarely, however, a moment in time when without forethought a lone hero stands up for virtue. More often it is a calculation – a courage calculation.

Among six components of the courage calculation is one of addressing what matters most. If you do not act, for example, will you be able to look at yourself in the mirror? Does the situation call for immediate, high-profile action or something more nuanced? Courage is not about squandering political capital on low priority issues. It is often about reaching deep within ourselves under career-threatening circumstances, discovering what matters, revisiting what we’ve pledged to do for the betterment of something beyond self and refusing to back down.

Whether Republican, Democrat or Independent, if you don’t see what Liz Cheney said and did yesterday as courage, you don’t understand the concept. She put democracy and the U.S. Constitution before fealty to one man, Donald Trump. She stood firm as the mantle of leadership was about to be taken from her by the likes of Kevin McCarthy and Steve Scalise to be given to a person who kissed the ring and was launched into stardom.

Representative Elise Stefanik publicly hitched her wagon to the cult of personality that is the current Republican Party. And while she will be suddenly risen high in one way, she has willingly been brought low in another. Here is a young woman with promise in several ways, who, it appears, took a short cut to the top. Will Trump let her stay? Only if she does not disappoint, does not grow. There’s a reason why so many cowards fear Donald Trump. He is vengeful. And no one is safe for long.

What is democracy without courage? We are learning. It is damaged and in peril. As such, those who have forgotten the travesties of the past brought on by obsequiousness to one man, or who simply don’t care, see their chance.

Liz Cheney stood up to them. Were she and I to sit down for lunch one day, we would have differences. But I know courage when I see it. I know, too, what it feels like to have people take what you’ve worked so hard to achieve merely to advance their own agenda. Standing up to such people is never easy. It is, however, what those among us must do to protect what is precious, to create a bridge over troubled times when virtue is drowning. She did these things yesterday, nearly alone, and ultimately she did them for us.

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5 Responses to Courage vs. Subservience – Liz Cheney and Elise Stefanik

  1. colleen says:

    I am all for courage but Liz Cheney has decided that what she wants is not what the people want from her. Period. It is the consumer that buys the goods in politics and in life. People like Trump. 74 million people voted for him. Period. The majority of the Republican party recognizes this and will support Trump. If they do not they will not be reelected. I think Liz Cheney is absolutely right to hate Trump but she had divided the party. Trump represents is the new Republican voter. I doubt Cheney will get reelected.

  2. Barbara Fittipaldi says:

    Thank you, Kathleen.

  3. Wendy Goldman says:

    Time will tell who gave Americans the most beneficial advice. I’m convinced that there will be a certain end to the lies after a brief time, when rationality returns. We have to elect the right candidates to reform our system.

  4. Sam says:

    It’s easy to drum up courage to just do the right thing, the bear minimum, what is expected of every human being, just tell the truth for once in your wretched life,
    when you’re in Hell.

  5. Scott says:

    Once again the American people prove that Democracy is an experiment worth
    saving and preserving and as always Republicans prove again that the GOP experiment is worthy of extinction.
    Republicans can’t even and aren’t interested in maintaining
    civil decency on any level within or without their snarling, snarky and cynical
    party, much less govern in a free nation. In fact, Republican politicians have absolutely no business being in politics or elected government.

    We should never again call a 2nd party “Republican”, but instead establish a new party created with a new name (Antifah would be appropriate) and the GOP forever shunned along with the KKK, Confederate and most appropriately the Nazi
    (Not see) party. The GOP committed every exact political crime, same path Hitler did in their failed attempt to dissolve Democracy and replace ours with GOP fascism using the same strategy Hitler succeeded in destroying their democracy along with the liberal German people.

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