"Too many people in government seem to think they are above regular folks, and I said I would expect humility in the way each member of my team served- that they would recognize that the taxpayer is boss"
About this Quote
Sanford is doing the oldest trick in American politics: laundering authority through humility. By scolding "people in government" for acting "above regular folks", he positions himself as the corrective outsider even while speaking as an insider with real power. The line works because it taps a durable grievance - not abstract ideology, but a felt social hierarchy where bureaucrats and elected officials treat citizens like inconveniences. "Regular folks" is doing a lot of work: it flattens differences in class and interest into a single, morally legitimate public.
The subtext is managerial and disciplinary. Sanford isn't just promising nicer attitudes; he's laying down a chain of command. "Each member of my team" frames government like a private-sector operation, with him as CEO and "humility" as a performance metric. Then he sharpens it with a corporate slogan in populist drag: "the taxpayer is boss". That phrase converts citizenship into a transactional identity. You don't get deference because you're a resident, a voter, or someone affected by policy; you get it because you pay. It's a neat move: it sounds democratic while subtly narrowing who counts as the principal.
Context matters, because Sanford's appeal has long lived in the conservative reform lane - fiscal discipline, skepticism of government, a taste for moralizing about public service. The quote is aimed at voters who suspect government isn't merely inefficient but culturally contemptuous. It promises not bigger or smaller government so much as a government that knows its place.
The subtext is managerial and disciplinary. Sanford isn't just promising nicer attitudes; he's laying down a chain of command. "Each member of my team" frames government like a private-sector operation, with him as CEO and "humility" as a performance metric. Then he sharpens it with a corporate slogan in populist drag: "the taxpayer is boss". That phrase converts citizenship into a transactional identity. You don't get deference because you're a resident, a voter, or someone affected by policy; you get it because you pay. It's a neat move: it sounds democratic while subtly narrowing who counts as the principal.
Context matters, because Sanford's appeal has long lived in the conservative reform lane - fiscal discipline, skepticism of government, a taste for moralizing about public service. The quote is aimed at voters who suspect government isn't merely inefficient but culturally contemptuous. It promises not bigger or smaller government so much as a government that knows its place.
Quote Details
| Topic | Servant Leadership |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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