Prime Minister Kevin Rudd Source:
DailyTelegraph
A GIANT ego.
A narcissist.
A micro-manager.
An impulsive control
freak.
A haphazard and
secretive decision maker.
This is not what Kevin Rudd's political enemies
think of him. It's what many of his colleagues do.
Whether openly or whispered in hushed tones to journalists,
this is the picture once painted by his fellow ministers, MPs, public servants
and diplomatic associates.
It's a decent rap sheet - one that easily tops the usual
bile directed at colleagues or opponents in the den of iniquity that is
politics. But nothing that borders outlandish.
Then, one day, the dam broke. The outspoken and literally
outgoing member for Bendigo Steve Gibbons took to Twitter and publicly declared
his former leader a "psychopath". Among other less than genteel
terms.
Gibbons is a man who is routinely and rightly pilloried for
making crude, stupid and nasty remarks in the name of cheap publicity.
But this time the term took off, which perhaps says more
about Rudd than it does about Gibbons.
So is it true? Is the man running this country really a
psychopath, given the aforementioned ferocious descriptions appear to tick
plenty of the boxes that define such a diagnosis?
Firstly, one has to demystify the term.
Such a designate is no longer deemed by experts to be the
exclusive domain of murderers, serial killers and rapists.
No, you could indeed be sitting next to one. Your boss could
be one, or, perhaps more likely, your high-flying CEO in his spacious corner
office suite.
In fact prominent Australian psychotherapist John Clarke
claims that between one and three per cent of the Australian population could
be certifiably deemed psychopathic, and he warns not just police to keep a look
out but companies and political powerbrokers.
Anthropologist Stephen Juan suggests that one in 10
companies are headed by a corporate psychopath.
It seems psychopaths are everywhere, and they are more
likely to wear a suit and tie, than carry a bloodied weapon or be pointing a
sawn-off shotgun.
"One of the misconceptions about psychopathy itself is
that people think a psychopath goes out and kills people. By definition, they
are somebody that is recklessly indifferent to any physical, emotional harm
they may cause," criminal mind expert Steve van Aperen said.
"There are certainly many undiagnosed psychopaths in
business and politics."
Juan says often people get confused between the terms
psychopath and psychotic, which makes people less inclined to label someone as
the former and thus grouping them with such fiends as Ivan Milat, Charles
Manson or Martin Bryant. The distinction is reality, he says. Those suffering
from psychosis have lost grip on reality. Those deemed psychopathic are very
much aware of it, and are attempting to control it.
They are often easy to spot, Juan says, and follow a defined
set of traits that set them apart from normality.
"The corporate psychopath is the type of psychopath
that gets into politics because they are usually exceedingly ego-oriented - it
is all about them. So even when they get criticism, it is still all about
them," he says.
PM
unsurprised by Beattie polling
The PM says he's not surprised by polling showing Peter
Beattie well behind the coalition in Forde.
"They love the centre of attention. Good or bad they
see themselves being the centre of the universe.
"They are the great users, the great manipulators, they
often have aides and underlings do work for them, and expect blind loyalty but
they don't give loyalty in return. They use everyone for gain.
"Everything is about them. If you talk to them in a
conversation about your issues, they will immediately turn it around to their
issues. It's as if no one exists other than them."
They are always exploiting issues for their own gain, says
Dr Juan.
They climb the corporate ladder very effectively, they are
often very charming and articulate, often very good looking which they use to
their advantage.
It is the only thing they exist for. Themselves. They can't
be trusted, they will lie to your face and deny they have when they are caught.
They never own up to their own actions, they are always blaming others. They
are polar opposites in public and private, with the former a place for their
charm offensive to be exercised, and the latter a dark place of indifference
and loathing.
It's the psychopath's modus operandi; a persona that they
can't escape from, a disguise that soon becomes arduous to hide.
In a bid to unmask those with psychopathic tendencies and
prevent crime, Canadian criminal psychologist and FBI adviser Robert D Hare
created the Psychopathy Checklist in the early 1990s that remains the gold
standed for reference.
Its defined set of traits include impulsiveness, superficial
charm, grandiosity, callousness, manipulative, lack of remorse or guilt,
propensity to blame others, poor behavioural control, egocentric.
Whether unfairly or resoundingly just, Kevin Rudd's name has
oft been etched beside those traits, by members of his own camp or from across
enemy lines.
His impulsiveness is well documented, from rushed decision
making done without proper consultation with colleagues or stakeholders, to his
"policies on the run" such as the changes to the Fringe Benefit Tax
system that crack down on salary-sacrificed cars, to the detriment of
the struggling car industry.
On these rash methods, he is internationally renowned.
DT
Splash Abbott Rudd
"He makes snap announcements without consulting other
countries or within the Australian government," said a US Embassy official
of Kevin Rudd in a leaked memo to the Whitehouse.
Superficial charm? The opposition have climbed aboard this
freight train, frequently referring to the PM as fake. Even Fairfax editors
denounce the man who is smiling, caring Kevin the Queenslander, but is vastly
different behind closed doors, where no cameras lurk.
"Much has been written and said about Kevin Rudd when
the camera is rolling and Kevin Rudd in private," editor of the Launceston
Examiner, Martin Gilmour said.
"Based on my experience on Thursday morning when the
doors closed, he was about as engaged and charismatic as a silt rake."
Grandiosity? Egocentric? Enter stage left, former opposition
leader and intimidating hand-shaker Mark Latham.
"I mean this guy is a once-in-a-century
egomaniac," said Mr Latham in his jilted-lover tome.
Poor behavioural control? The RAAF air hostess who copped a
Rudd spray because his special meal wasn't available; the foul-mouth tirade
delivered while filming a video message in Chinese; the exodus of 16 staff from
his office in his first year as PM due to his "short fuse and unreasonable
demands" and the current rumours that 80 per cent of his staff hate his
guts.
In a News Corp Australia survey of 30,000 voters last month
voters were given a list of words to describe Rudd.
The results were stark: smug, manipulative and egotistical.
Claude Minisini spent 15 years within the FBI's behavioural
science division. In his opinion, Kevin Rudd is your classic organisational
psychopath. Ticks every box, allegedly.
"One of the traits of a psychopath is a lack of
remorse. Has Kevin Rudd shown that? In relation to the pink batts saga, has he
ever come out and said sorry to individuals for him making that bad decision?
The answer is no," Ms Minisini said.
"Is he indifferent, or does he rationalise having hurt
or mistreated someone else? I suppose he ticks that box too. I would certainly
say that he is impulsive. Has he failed to adequately plan ahead? I suppose he
ticks that box too. Is he irritable and aggressive? Yes, he probably ticks that
one.
While Rudd may exhibit some psychopathic tendencies, it is
near impossible for an outsider to officially determine, says a more restrained
Dr Juan.
"They would have to get to the bottom of their
motivations," he said.
"There would be some people that would say that he is
(a psychopath), given in his early administration, many of his aides left
because he was difficult to work with.
"You can see these traits in many politicians, not just
Kevin Rudd. He has tendencies that are very egotistical, ego centred, but is it
only about him? That is the real issue."
Research conducted by Western Sydney University professor
Peter Jonason claims that while Machiavellianism is apolitical in its nature,
there is a "left-leaning bias for those individuals high on
psychopathy".
"Psychopathy may thrive in more liberal areas because
of the lessened focus on law and order. And thus, it is within liberal areas
that psychopathy may have a freer reign, therefore, freeing up men to benefit
from such an approach to life," he said.
But there are other known traits of the psychopath that Rudd
bypasses. Psychopaths are usually submerged in sexual promiscuity (not sure a
visit to Scores counts) and have poor marital relations.
Despite the obvious shortcomings, several clinical
psychologists and researchers believe possessing the traits of a psychopath
could be advantageous for someone seeking political power.
A research paper lead by Emory University's Scott Lilienfeld
explored such issues, pinpointing which US presidents were more likely to
exhibit psychopathic traits.
"Some psychopathic traits, such as interpersonal
dominance, persuasiveness and venturesomeness, may be conducive to acquiring
positions of political power and to successful leadership," the paper
claimed. It cited Winston Churchill and Lyndon Johnson as perfect case studies,
claiming both possessed very real characteristics of a psychopath, but who
"managed to parlay these traits into political success".
Oxford University research psychologist Kevin Dutton is
another believer that psychopaths can actually lead incredibly successful
lives.
"When psychologists talk about psychopaths, what we're
referring to are people who have a distinct set of personality characteristics,
which include things like ruthlessness, fearlessness, mental toughness, charm,
persuasiveness and a lack of conscience and empathy," he said.
Those beasts, however, are rare, says Dr Juan, who believes
most psychopaths who get to the top of their game come crashing down in a heap
when their true motivations and their extreme sense of self-worth and
importance are laid bare before the public.
Cue disgraced Italian President Silvio Berlusconi, the
balding media tycoon who thought he was so far above the law of the land, and
predominant moral standings, that he thought nothing about paying an underage
prostitute for sex, and then abused his powers in an attempt to cover a
multitude of sins.
Berlusconi - Stamped: Psychopath.
Cue Anthony Weiner and his misbehaving, err, wiener. Having
received a generous bounty of grace from the public over his sexting scandal
that forced him to resign from Congress in 2011, the leading candidate for the
New York mayoral robes was again caught with his pants down last month, using
an alias Carlos Danger to text a woman, describing himself, among other things,
as a "perpetually horny middle-aged man".
Weiner - Stamped: Psychopath.
"Psychopaths are the ones that are do incredibly stupid
things, things that are easily found out, then they lie and deny. This is a
general pattern and you see that in politicians around the world. Berlusconi in
Italy, Weiner in New York. It is as if they think they are above scrutiny. Yet
of course they live in a fishbowl."
"At the end of the day, most of them get caught
out."
Where Kevin Rudd sits on the scale, if at all, is an
open-ended question - one that only a psychiatrist and a comfortable couch
could deduce. Besides, maybe we should be grateful that our top politicians
could be psychopaths. At least we know where they are.
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