The unexpected key to fighting a pandemic: Compassion
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| London
It鈥檚 been a long, fiercely contested election campaign, inevitably dominated by the COVID-19 pandemic. And we already know the result.
No, not the campaign for November鈥檚 election in America, but last Saturday鈥檚 vote in the Pacific island nation of New Zealand. There, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern won a landslide of historic proportions. And her victory offered a critically important lesson for leaders worldwide on politics in the time of the coronavirus.
A series of lessons in fact: Leadership matters. The kind of leadership matters. And while even the right kind can鈥檛 save every life, nor avert deep economic and social pain, it will, in the end, be rewarded with understanding and support from most citizens.
Why We Wrote This
Our global columnist picks out clarity, coherence, and compassion as qualities that distinguish leaders who have coped well with the pandemic. But the greatest of these is compassion.
Ms. Ardern, who led her Labour Party to its highest vote share in five decades, is the clearest example. But there are others: Chancellor Angela Merkel in Germany, for instance; K.K. Shailaja, the health minister in the southwest Indian state of Kerala; or individual governors in the United States such as New York鈥檚 Andrew Cuomo.
The course of the pandemic has differed from place to place. Germany and Kerala, though suffering far lower losses than their neighbors, are now dealing with a further wave of infections. New York isn鈥檛 entirely out of the woods either. But their leaders have taken a broadly similar approach to Ms. Ardern鈥檚.
You could call it the 鈥渢hree C鈥檚鈥: clarity, coherence, and 鈥 a quality that seems almost quaint in today鈥檚 political atmosphere 鈥 compassion.
First, clarity. Clarity of message, calmly and consistently delivered. Prime Minister Ardern and the others essentially told their citizens: This virus spreads from person to person. The only way to confront it is to stay away from one another, even locking down as necessary. That鈥檚 going to be tough. It鈥檚 going to be painful, for all of us. But I need you, and we need one another, to do this together.
Then, coherence: adopting specific measures 鈥 ranging from social distancing and wearing masks, testing and tracking, to lockdowns 鈥 and sticking with them even if people get impatient and start demanding that the rules be relaxed.
Which is partly why so much depends upon compassion, leaders鈥 ability to convey a sense that their people are facing a shared challenge in pursuit of a singular aim: protecting family and friends, neighbors and fellow citizens. Saving lives.
In some places that has come over as something closer to tough love. Kerala鈥檚 Health Minister Shailaja hasn鈥檛 minced her words in recent days when decrying the 鈥渉uge laxity鈥 shown by the public during an August religious festival, as well as a series of political rallies, which are threatening a new wave of cases.
But when it comes to Ms. Shailaja, a former high school science teacher, her underlying humanity has never been in doubt. She won national fame managing another virus two years ago 鈥 by personally visiting terrified villagers at the start of the outbreak to reassuringly explain the threat and how it could be turned back.
In Germany, Chancellor Merkel has always seemed slightly uncomfortable with public displays of emotion. Still, her political nickname 鈥 Mutti, German for 鈥渕om鈥 鈥 points to the calming, maternal influence she enjoys with the public.
As social gatherings among young people feed a potential second wave of COVID-19, she addressed them directly last week: 鈥淚sn鈥檛 it worth being a bit patient now?鈥 she asked. 鈥淓verything will come back 鈥 partying, going out, fun without coronavirus rules. But right now, something else matters most: being mindful of one another, and sticking together.鈥
Governor Cuomo鈥檚 daily news briefings, at the height of the pandemic in New York earlier this year, did project the need for people to stay tough 鈥 鈥淣ew York Tough.鈥 But on more than one occasion he reminded his audience that part of being strong was the capacity to show fellow-feeling, to care.
鈥淎t the end of the day, my friends, even if it is a long day, love wins,鈥 he told a press conference in March. 鈥淎nd it will win again, through this virus.鈥
Still, it is Ms. Ardern who provides the most dramatic example of clear, coherent, and compassionate leadership showing results. Only 25 lives have been lost to the pandemic in New Zealand.
From early February 鈥 the day after a man in the Philippines became the first COVID-19 fatality outside China 鈥 she announced a steadily tightening series of limits on foreign visitors, along with a quarantine system for arrivals. By late March she had imposed a national lockdown, even though New Zealand had by then registered only a hundred cases and no deaths.
The prime minister herself delivered regular video messages offering explanation and empathy: on one occasion she spoke from a bedroom in her family home. Though restrictions were looser by June, a resurgence of cases prompted a second, three-week lockdown in August. Yet by the election, everyday life was back to normal after three weeks without a new infection.聽
One case was reported that day, a port worker, who was immediately placed in isolation along with his family members. This week, two of the man鈥檚 work and social contacts also tested positive, as did a number of fishing-crew workers arriving on a flight from Moscow 鈥 all sent to be housed in government-run quarantine quarters.
Despite her success in limiting the spread of COVID-19, Ms. Ardern now faces other challenges, above all dealing with the pandemic鈥檚 severe economic costs. The economy, particularly dependent on tourism, is now in recession. Rising numbers of people are claiming state benefits.
The early signs suggest she will seek to tackle those challenges the same way she responded to the pandemic. If a victory-night speech emphasizing the importance of respecting opponents鈥 views is any indication, she will seek to build consensus. With compassion.
As is traditional, a slew of congratulatory messages flowed in on election night from around the world. But one stood out. It was from the Dalai Lama, who praised her 鈥渃ourage, wisdom and leadership.鈥
He added that he also admired 鈥渢he calm, compassion and respect for others she has shown in these challenging times.鈥