It's not you, it's the title
It’s not you, it’s the title
Mr. Mayor; Mr. Chair; Mr. President. There you go – carry one of those titles
around for a while and you’ll think you’re pretty special. In fact, you might even seem smart as so many
marvel at your words. The key is though to know how you’ll be treated when the
title is gone.
Elsewhere in these stories I will describe
how I’ve chased these titles since grade five.
And this means I learned at an early age what happens when they are
gone. Toughest school age experience was
being a ‘mover and shaker’ in our grade nine class and so assured that I could
get elected School President for my grade ten year (this was at a time that
junior high was grade eight to ten.) My
dad’s transfer to Victoria put an end to that and I arrived at a new school for
grade ten with no one really giving a damn about my suggestions or yet alone
leadership. It was a long year and it
took to the end of grade eleven to finally challenge for School President,
albeit unsuccessfully.
The first adult experience came in
1986. Somehow I managed to serve as
President of the Greater Victoria Chamber of Commerce in 1985 at the ripe age
of 30. My wife and I attended cocktail parties,
receptions, and fundraisers all year long.
During the day I came and went from our family business to chair
meetings, speak at media announcements, attend ribbon cuttings and of course
meet Premiers and Cabinet Ministers. But
as soon as my term was up, the invites thinned out considerably. Seems the invites were to the Chamber
President but not for me.
The darkest contrast came when I lost the
May 1996 provincial election. I’d spent
three years doing everything the leader had asked and that often meant meeting
industry and lobby groups to represent the new face of our party. Ferry rides, Vancouver hotel rooms, lunches
and dinners were all part of the menu as I flourished within Gordon Campbell’s
inner circle – so much so that I was named in a Vancouver Sun story as one of
the party’s ‘up and comers.’ The day
after my election defeat that all changed – no one wanted to meet with me,
including Campbell. That summer was a
long one.
So I was very much prepared for life after
my eighteen years as Mayor in 2014. I
knew the invites would disappear and indeed they did. I still see the dinners, annual events and
ribbon cuttings on my ‘friends’ Facebook pages – but completely understand why
no one invites me anymore. And that is
the lesson for those currently in such political positions, particularly the
newly-elected. You’re thrilled being
invited to events you never even knew of and flattered that so many people want
to hear your comments and opinions. But
know – and tell yourself daily – that this is not your real world. Know that they are not inviting you; they are
inviting your position.
Perhaps I’ll add a footnote to make my
point. My political fundraiser always
auctioned off ‘lunch with the Mayor.’ At the 2014 event, Alan Lowe worked his
magic as an auctioneer and just as two bidders were reaching a very high amount
– he suggested they both ‘win’ and buy lunch with the Mayor. They did and our campaign benefited from their
cheques. Post-election I still felt
obliged to buy these businessmen lunch and I sent them emails offering to set
up a date and place but….they both responded and said ‘no thanks.’ You see, even when they’d paid big bucks they
weren’t interested in having lunch with me – it was my title.
Check out my website at http://frankleonard.ca/ for information on Local Government and Consulting
Check out my website at http://frankleonard.ca/ for information on Local Government and Consulting