I hope that Representative
White does not interpret these remarks as a political attack from one of his
enemies. I believe that he can learn
from the events of last week and see the experience as an exercise in humility
and not as the culmination of his political opponents trying to humiliate him.
I am a democrat and not one of his
constituents. I have adamantly disagreed
with his position on the Washington County reassessment debate and believe it
amounts to political show-boating. The
citizens of Washington County deserve to pay property taxes that are fair and
equitable. His repeated attacks against
the lawyers and school districts who seek to achieve this goal have been
misplaced, personal and vicious.
Conversely,
I have for the most part, supported Representative White’s efforts to look
under the rug of the oil and gas industry in South Western Pennsylvania. Unfortunately, because of the recent social
media disclosures, his work on this important issue has been badly damaged and
his actions have caused irreparable harm to the cause, for all of us.
At
the risk of making a point that goes without saying, there is a deep chasm
separating the politician who seeks elective office to become a statesman,
where there are two sides to every issue, and one who seeks elective office to
advance an individual personality cult and/or to acquire a dedicated power
base. The latter type of politician
seeks to make enemies in order to carve out a following and make a name for
himself, without regard for good governance.
Similar to the case before us, there are also
lawyers who become emotionally attached to their client’s causes and
journalists who are unable to stay unbiased when reporting on political
events. In all these cases, professionalism
is forgotten; unwarranted blame is assessed against the perceived “enemy” and
little of worth is accomplished.
I
would like to make a few observations on social media in this affair. I have written in the past that those
futurists who predict that these new methods of communication will soon become
the vehicle for local news and replace newspapers are dead wrong. Jesse White’s antics help prove my point.
Facebook, twitter, hidden e-mail identities and the like are fraught with
emotional knee jerk reactions and outright falsehoods that belie accurate
reporting. (The O-R was correct in canceling impossible to verify comments to
editorial letters on its online site)
On the other hand,
there is nothing unique in what Representative White was attempting to do. Since the invention of the printing press,
writers have used false or hidden names to advance their agendas. Heretical theologians did so to save their
heads. In Paris before the French
Revolution, everyone tried to guess the authors of the hundreds of political
pamphlets circulating on the streets.
What makes this episode more egregious is that it feels like an attack
on our democratic principles when an elected official seeks to boost his
political standing by secretly creating online fictitious supporters. Jesse White avatars run amuck. A little like science fiction and a little
like a trip to the graveyard to manufacture votes on Election Day.
It is difficult to believe that Representative
White could have gained much political traction through these self serving and
childish actions. When his older
constituents, who make up a majority of the voters, read about the allegations,
they will have little idea what all the fuss is about. Most of them have never been on facebook or
read an e-mail response to an online letter.
They know Mr. White through the newspaper, the last township meeting or
the local bingo.
In other words, his game playing if left
undetected, would have had little influence on Jesse White the candidate. Somehow I think that Mr. White knew this. His online actions were about “being right”
and “getting the enemy” not about getting votes.
Initially lying
and blaming the investigation on his political opponents and then changing his
story to “my opponents made me do it” was not sound damage control. He should have done a complete mea culpa and parked his ego in the
closet. Even a loose cannon like ex
Congressman Anthony Weiner was able to be more contrite after his social
networking exploits.
Representative White can probably recover
from this self inflicted wound by taking some of his boundless energy and
directing it in a more statesmanlike manner to the issues at hand. I hope that he does. A lot less sniping and a lot more legislating
and measured discourse would be good for his district and for his political
future.
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