This Matters with Bill Britt
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See recent postsWhen leadership becomes performance
Leadership used to be about responsibility. Now it often looks like a performance.
When did leadership stop being about responsibility—and start becoming performance?
In the latest installment of his commentary series “This Matters,” Alabama Political Reporter publisher Bill Britt takes on that question, examining how the incentives shaping leadership may be quietly changing.
In the episode, “When Leadership Becomes Performance,” Britt argues that when attention becomes the goal, something deeper begins to shift beneath the surface.
“Attention is currency,” Britt says. “Outrage is strategy.”
He explains that as the system rewards visibility over substance, the incentives begin to change. Not just how leaders act but what they respond to.
This isn’t theoretical. Britt points to a broader pattern in modern politics, where moments are crafted for reaction, not resolution, and where the loudest voices often dominate the conversation.
Drawing on history, he notes that leadership was once defined by restraint, deliberation, and a sense of weight behind decision-making. Referencing John Adams, Britt underscores the expectation that leadership requires more than ambition. It requires discipline.
“Liberty cannot be preserved without a general knowledge among the people,” Adams warned.
That tension—between responsibility and performance—sits at the center of the episode.
And it leads to a deeper question that’s not just about politics, but about what happens when attention becomes the measure of leadership itself.
The episode is part of Britt’s ongoing “This Matters with Bill Britt” series, exploring the civic ideas shaping today’s political environment. Watch the full episode now and decide for yourself.
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