I’m here to impart some shocking news. After 15 years of examining Congressmen and California state legislators at close range, I’ve determined that they are human beings. In fact, I think a mistake that many public interest advocates make (and lord knows I was one of ’em) is forgetting the degree to which they are dealing with human beings not some sort of super race, or robot version of ourselves, but ourselves.
Like people, legislators breathe, eat, sleep, have dysfunctional upbringings, and experience a full range of human emotions.
We tend to remember that they lust for power, praise and money and that they respond to pressure from constituents out of fear for their political future. But we tend to forget that most basic human desire, the need for love and understanding and compassion. The need to belong. The need to be okay with themselves and their own core values. And yes, they all have core values, even if they don’t seem to be driven by them.
I am mindful of a story about Martin Luther King Jr. prior to his first face to face meeting with Attorney General Bobby Kennedy. As he prepared for the meeting with his closest advisors and allies, they talked trash on Bobby–he was white, he was Catholic, he was never going to understand, the administration would never help–they despaired of getting through to him.
King said something to the effect of “no, we can’t go into this meeting with any of that in our minds. We have to love this man as we love ourselves. We are not going to anything else to prepare for this meeting but pray for the love and understanding of this man.” And so they did. They prayed and focussed on love of Bobby Kennedy for several days prior to the meeting. And when they went in, they made history.
Too often here in Sacramento, I’ve been a party to preparation for meetings where we have the idea that the legislator we’re talking to is a lost cause, an asshole, a coward, a sell-out. I doubt it would go over well if I asked us to hold Chuck Calderon in love, for example (a California Democrat whose voting and legacy has been a constant challenge to liberals).
But I have noticed that even a Chuck Calderon wants to think of himself as a good guy. Even a Chuck Calderon wants to believe that he does what he does for the benefit of all. He tells himself that siding with a business interest against a consumer group thereby killing bills that would advance the rights of working people is seeking “balance” or protecting jobs. He has a strong rationale for all he does.
Who among us has not rationalized harmful behavior? I know I have. I have hurt people I loved and come up with a way that it is okay. Ultimately it is this weakness, this humanity that binds us together, not our strength, or show of force. Ultimately, I can’t help but think that love is the missing ingredient in public policy.
I love you, Chuck Calderon, for you are me.