Friday, January 13, 2017

An Open Letter to Donald Trump



Dear Mr. President-Elect,

                Unlike many of my colleagues, family members and friends, I do not challenge your right to assume the role of President, as the Electoral College did cast the majority of their votes for you.

                As a patriot and a government-worker myself, I hold the office of the President in the highest regard.  I have even argued that every President of The United States has done at least one good thing for policy and for the public good during their tenure.  I have been called a bad liberal for believing such things, but when you are in the thick of public service, you get a much different perspective than the lobbyists on both sides of the aisle have the luxury of maintaining.

                With this in mind, and retaining the highest of respect for the office of the Commander in Chief, I implore you be vigilant, concerned, patient, and kind.  Please do not start wars during your tenure as President.  Please do not make birth control prohibitively expensive.  Please try your best to encourage the public’s esteem.  Do good works.  Assuming that we only have this one life to do the best that we possibly can—do the best that you can and be the best President that you possibly can be.  Whether Republican or Democrat, Liberal or Conservative, there is an expectation (a reasonable one) that while one is President, one should try their best to be above reproach.

                I work with finances, and so almost every day my numbers are subject to discussion—base assumptions change, expectations change.  If I took challenges, corrections, or opposition to my work personally and vented any number of reactions to these on Twitter, my job would be in jeopardy.   This is as it should be.  Public administration (whether protected by Civil Service laws or not) is the art of working with others to arrive at solutions to public problems.  Working with others is key.  I can do irreparable damage to my reputation if I do not keep that in mind.  A measure of decorum is necessary, and it is a sacrifice to provide that decorum.  Maintenance of decorum attributable to your position is the sacrifice that you are (at least minimally) agreeing to make when you step into The Office of The President of The United States.

                I can completely understand the drive to go the opposite direction – after all, your persona during the election season was a brash and outspoken candidate who breaks the rules and comes close to throwing out the rule-book.

                I have faith that you can find a middle ground to soldier ahead in the role of President without needling your public on Twitter.  We as a country need to know that you will work for all of us, not punish us for exercising the right to free speech.  Not everyone is destined to be a President.  The rules that will now apply to you are so much stricter than the rules for the rest of America.  Be worthy of the office.  Be my President, too.

Best regards,
Amanda C. Prescott, MPA

No comments:

Post a Comment