Assessing Leadership Style: Trait Analysis

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13. William Jefferson Clinton's

Leadership Style

Margaret G. Hermann

This leadership profile of Bill Clinton, forty-second president of the
United States, is based on an analysis of his responses to the domes-
tic and international press in fifty-four interviews between 1992 and



  1. The description that follows is derived from an at-a-distance
    assessment of some 36,750 words. The words were examined for evi-
    dence of seven different characteristics that have implications for
    how political leaders will behave, the kinds of actions they are likely
    to urge on their parties and governments, and the way they structure
    and interact with their advisory groups. An individual leader's traits
    are put into perspective by comparing them with similar scores for
    other political leaders from their region and around the globe. The
    characteristics are contextualized further by exploring how stable
    they are across issues, audiences, and time. The attributes that define
    the profile are those that historians, journalists, political scientists,
    and other students of leadership have found to be influential in shap-
    ing what leaders will do politically. The traits that are examined are
    (i) the belief that one can influence or control what happens, (2) the
    need for power and influence, (3) conceptual complexity (the ability
    to differentiate among things and people in one's environment), (4)
    self-confidence or self-esteem, (5) in-group bias, (6) general distrust
    of others, and (7) the tendency to focus on problem solving and
    accomplishing something versus maintenance of the group and deal-
    ing with others' ideas and sensitivities. The at-a-distance technique
    is described in more detail in chapter 8.
    Several types of verbal material were available on Clinton:


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