Saturday, May 31, 2008

Scott McClellan and Social Network Analysis

Last Monday, the Washington Post had an article on social network analysis. The article made the point, using an analysis of smoking patterns based on the Framingham epidemiological study, that the behavior of one's social network are sometimes more predictive of one's own decisions than are one's own reported attitudes.

Scott McClellan was a deputy Press Secretary in the White House early in this administration. His social network at the time would have been the inner circle of the Bush administration, and they would have been likely to share a number of attitudes. It would not be surprising if McClellan absorbed the positions of those associates. This is especially true since he was a relatively low ranking person among the holders of the most important political offices in the nation, and indeed possibly in the world. I was amazed when I worked in the White House at the impact that the prestige of the offices had on my opinions and those of others.

I also note that acting for the Office of the Press Secretary, his responsibility was to represent the positions of the administration, not to make public his own opinions. (And indeed, I suspect that the higher ranking members of the administration would not have been much interested in Mr. McClellan's opinions, had he tried to express them within the administration.) It must be almost impossible to effectively represent opinions of those one serves and respects as a full time job, while maintaining separate, independent opinions one can not share.

Mr. McClellan has now had several years working on his memoir of his time in office. He of course has learned, as have we all, a great deal more about the results of the positions he defended in the early years of the decade. I suppose that when he left the White House he broke contact with the White House network, and he must have formed new network connections with his editor and others as he wrote and prepared his book for publication. So I wonder how much of his change in public statements of his opinions can be attributed to:
  • actual learning on his part, especially learning due to new analysis of the situation,
  • substitution of the opinions of the members of his new network for those of his former (White House) network members.
  • desire to sell a lot of books.
Since McClellan is a skilled journalist, who has in the past made money in service to the representation of views he did not necessarily share, this latter possibility can not be totally rejected.

David Brooks, commenting on McClellan's book, argued that the Bush administration had relatively few members who were capable of developing thoughtful, analytical positions on foreign policy, and of forcefully arguing those positions in the internal forums of the White House. Indeed, he suggests that this administration has failed to conduct detailed debates on critically important foreign policy issues before taking important decisions.

If we accept the concept that there is a social construction of knowledge and understanding even in the White House, then it would seem fundamental that that social process include informed and thoughtful individuals who forcefully argue their alternative views of the issues and their alternative proposals for action. One can only hope that Brooks is wrong about the Bush administration, and more importantly, that future administrations will utilize strong procedures for the construction of their positions and decisions.

2 comments:

Valdis Krebs said...

You posted...
"...that that social process include informed and thoughtful individuals who forcefully argue their alternative views of the issues and their alternative proposals for action..."

That is NOT how a bubble [McClellan's word] or a tight echo chamber works... dissenting opinions are not heard or are drowned out by the official line, endlessly echoed.

See my social network analysis of how an echo chamber formed and operated in major league baseball with the use of steroids...

A similar echo chamber appears to be operating in this administration -- quite a few authors have mentioned this dynamic.

John Daly said...

The analysis presented on valdis' blog is worth your attention, and so too are the concepts of "a bubble" and "an echo chamber".

I think valdis and I agree that the decision making process in the Bush White House in the time that McClellan describes was far from optimal.

In my original posting I reflected David Brooks' view that the Bush White House lacked a critical mass of people who could and would debate critically important policy issues. I should also have noted that not only is such a debate important, but it will not work well unless the network within which the debate takes place contains people with a wide variety of views, who are willing and able to reflect the spectrum of alternatives within the debate.

If a president surrounds himself with yes men, then you have one form of echo chamber. If he surrounds himself with only a cadre of like minded men, that too can be an echo chamber. The president should seek out men of wisdom and character who represent differing views to include in the debate on important policy issues.

I happen to like the idea of a public official getting out of their bubbles for a while in order to reflect on what happened in the past and how things might be done better in the future. The White House pressure cooker does not provide a suitable climate for reflection. I think it important that one does have time for reflection and that distance does lend perspective. So at least in one respect I commend Mr. McClellan for his effort in writing his book and sharing his revised views with the public.