A Lesson Learned
When Ego Trumps Accountability
Last week, one of the most brilliant scholars I’ve known and a dedicated public servant, Paul Wolfowitz, resigned from the presidency of the World Bank, ending a scandal that had riveted Washington.
But even if it wasn’t a big deal where you live, there are still lessons about human fallibility we could all stand to learn.
When taking over as Bank president two years ago—a plum job which pays $300,000 in salary and $140,000 in expenses—Wolfowitz disclosed his “personal relationship” with his companion Shaha Ali Riza, a Bank employee. He consulted the Bank’s ethics committee but didn’t like their advice, which he said could injure her career.
So he ignored the ethics committee and directed a Bank vice president to reassign his companion to the State Department, avoiding the appearance of conflict. But it was at a substantial raise, more than Bank policy would allow, to $180,000 a year tax-free. Not bad.
But I know Wolfowitz, and I’m certain that he believed that just moving her out of his sight was safe. He couldn’t affect her job, but the fact is, he didn’t clear it with anybody because it probably never occurred to him that he could do something wrong. He knew what was best, he thought.
Well, that lasted only until—Washington-style—the press got hold of the story. Then it became a matter of when, not if, Wolfowitz would leave.
It’s easy to dismiss this as an “inside the Beltway” story that has little, if anything, to do with the “real world,” and is all about the corruption of political power. But the truth is, we’re all capable of this same kind of arrogance and folly. Convinced of our own rightness, we don’t often listen to others.
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The Wolfowitz story is a cautionary tale. Every Christian in authority, from a parent to a boss in the office, needs to find people who care more about God than our egos and who will tell us whether what we’re doing is advancing the Kingdom or our vanity—no matter how great we think we are.
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/ raangulo
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