Assessing Leadership Style: Trait Analysis

(Ron) #1
The Psychological Assessment of Political Leaders

and was further tempered by (3) needs for approval and respect. Often he
succeeded, especially when he was moving along the path to power.
When this combination aroused (4) a reaction-formation against aggres-
sion and (5) disruptive anxiety at the prospect of opposition, however,
he avoided a fight. When an issue had become emotionally charged,
however, his (6) insatiable achievement aspirations and (7) compulsive
stubbornness led to (8) denial and distorted perception. When this hap-
pened, he usually failed.


Genesis of Wilson's Personality Dynamics
The Georges trace the origins of Wilson's inner doubts and low self-
esteem to his conflicted relationship with his father, Joseph Ruggles
Wilson, a towering presence of a Presbyterian preacher, who made
perfectionist demands on those about him, including his children,
and reacted to errors with scorn and sarcasm. The Georges' thesis is
that these paternal demands created anxiety and resentment in the
young Woodrow Wilson. Furthermore, they suggest, he repressed
negative feelings and adopted his father's standards as his own, trying
to reduce anxiety by pleasing his father through high achievement.
Given the paucity of records and information about father-child
dynamics in the Wilson household, it is not surprising that the
Georges' reconstruction of the genesis of Wilson's personality has
met with some controversy from historians and Wilson biographers
(Schulte Nordholt 1991; Weinstein, Anderson, and Link 1978-79;
the scholarly debate is summarized in a series of articles in Political
Psychology introduced by Post 1983a, 1983b).

Alternative Interpretations of Wilson's Personality
Interpretation by Bullitt and Freud
The two right-hand columns of table 2.1 give brief presentations of
two alternative assessments of the dynamics behind Wilson's phe-
nomenology. Each is controversial, and each has major methodolog-
ical faults. The jointly written analysis by Sigmund Freud and
William C. Bullitt (a former U.S. diplomat), published in 1967 but
completed in the 19305, is marred by the authors' hostilities toward
their subject as well as a rather crudely mechanical style of interpre-
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