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Thai Union Named to Dow Jones Sustainability Index for Third Consecutive Year

From right hand: Setakul Chotichoey Corporate Environment, Health, Safety Manager of Thai Union Group PCL., Darian McBain, Ph.D. Thai Union’s global director of Sustainable Development ,Comgrit Sorchom, Director, Environmental, Health and Safety and Kanin Kaewin, Department Manager, Sustainable Department.

• Marking third year of continued improvement
• SeaChange’ drives Materiality score to industry best-in-class

12 SEP, 2016, BANGKOK — Thai Union Group Public Company Limited (Thai Union), the world’s largest shelf-stable tuna processor and owner of a leading global portfolio of seafood brands, has been named to the Dow Jones Sustainability Indices (DJSI) Emerging Markets for the third consecutive year.

Thai Union’s SeaChange’ sustainability strategy successfully drove the score for Materiality to an industry best-in-class 100th percentile. With strong performances from Business Codes of Conduct, and Labor and Human Rights contributed to the improvements that ranked in the 96th and 91st percentile, respectively. The increase in Thai Union’s score indicates the company’s efforts and discipline in applying sustainable practices and accountability across its business and supply chain are achieving results.

“We are honored to be recognized for our ongoing implementation of our sustainability roadmap, proving that we are on the right track,” said Thiraphong Chansiri, Thai Union’s CEO. “Sustainability is critical to the future of our industry and our world. We will continue to make transparency and ethical conduct an integral part of how we do business, to the benefit of our environment, economy and society,” he added.

DJSI is among the most highly-regarded metrics that evaluate global companies on their sustainability performance. Each year, over 3,000 companies are invited to participate in
RobecoSAM’s Corporate Sustainability Assessment (CSA). Companies are selected for the indices based on a comprehensive assessment of long-term economic, environmental and social criteria that account for general as well as industry-specific sustainability trends. Only firms that lead their industries based on this assessment are included in the indices.
Thai Union became the first Thai company to be included in the DJSI food category in 2014.

“Sustainability is a global need that requires a global commitment. With our SeaChange’ sustainability strategy, stringent application of Business Ethics and Labor Code of Conduct and other sustainability best practices, we seek to encourage the entire seafood industry to work together towards sustainability. To have an internationally recognized, independent third party institution endorse our efforts and implementations in operational excellence is an encouraging reward,” added Darian McBain, Ph.D., Thai Union’s global director of sustainable development.

Underscoring its commitment to transparency, Thai Union recently opened its SeaChange’ sustainability strategy goals and commitments to public consultation. Earlier this year, stakeholders were invited to provide comment on the content and nature of the goals for each of the four key programs: safe and legal labor; marine conservation; responsible sourcing; and caring for our communities. The feedback was collated, and revisions are being made to reflect stakeholder viewpoints. The new SeaChange’ website will be launched soon , along with further updates on progress. SeaChange’ will also be used as a platform for conversation and dialogue across the global industry, looking at how Thai Union can change seafood for good.

About Thai Union Group PCL
Thai Union Group PCL is the world’s seafood leader bringing high quality, healthy, tasty and innovative seafood products to customers across the world for almost 40 years.

Today, Thai Union is regarded as the world’s largest producer of shelf-stable tuna products with annual sales exceeding THB 125 billion (US$ 3.7 billion) and a global workforce of over 46,000 people who are dedicated to pioneering sustainable, innovative seafood products.

The company’s global brand portfolio includes market-leading international brands such as Chicken of the Sea, John West, Petit Navire, Parmentier, Mareblu, King Oscar, and R’gen Fisch and Thai-leading brands Sealect, Fisho and Bellotta

As a company committed to innovation and globally responsible behavior, Thai Union is proud to be a member of the United Nations Global Compact, and a founding member of the International Seafood Sustainability Foundation. Its work in sustainability has been recognized by its inclusion in the Dow Jones Sustainability Indices (DJSI) Emerging Markets since 2014. In 2016, Thai Union received a DJSI score of 72, the third consecutive year of DJSI score improvement.

Contact: Wisaka Chantakit
Thai Union Group+66.81.845.7316
[email protected]

For news releases and related materials visit the Thai Union News Room
Click here for more on SeaChange’ and follow us at www.twitter.com/ThaiUnionGroup

This is a paid advertorial. Khaosod English is not responsible for its content or claims.

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Relatives of MH370 Victims Want More Possible Debris Studied

In this Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2016, file photo, a waiter walks past a mural of flight MH370 in Shah Alam outside Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Joshua Paul / Associated Press

CANBERRA, Australia — Relatives of some of the 239 passengers and crew on missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 called Monday for more of its possible debris to be examined to define a new search area.

Malaysia, China and Australia agreed in July that the search in the southern Indian Ocean would be suspended after the current 120,000-square kilometer (46,000-square mile) expanse has been thoroughly examined with deep sea sonar equipment in the absence of credible new evidence that identified the plane’s location.

Eight relatives of lost passengers who met with Australian officials coordinating the search on behalf of Malaysia expressed frustration that they were not given a definition of what constituted credible new evidence that would result in a continuation of the search.

American wreckage hunter Blaine Gibson attended the meeting at the Australian Transport Safety Bureau headquarters with the relatives from Malaysia, China, Australia and Indonesia and handed over to investigators five pieces of potential debris that he found on beaches in Madagascar. Two of the pieces were burnt, which could indicate a disastrous fire on board, he said.

Gibson previously found a panel from Flight 370 in Mozambique. Malaysia has yet to collect other potential debris that Blaine has found washed up on Madagascar since June and handed to authorities there.

“I hope that the search will go on and in my amateur opinion this constitutes new, credible evidence that justifies continuing the search,” Gibson told reporters of his unconfirmed debris find.

Some confirmed pieces of debris have washed ashore in the western Indian Ocean, and the families believe other items yet to be examined may be clues to the plane’s location.

Grace Nathan, a Malaysian whose mother was on the Boeing 777 that vanished during a flight from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing on March 8, 2014, said governments should be coordinating a search for debris and using drift modeling to define a new area to search after the current search is to be completed in December.

“We want to call on the three nations – Australia, China and Malaysia – to make a concerted effort to go out and look for this credible new information,” Nathan said.

“It’s very impressive that one private individual citizen, Blaine Alan Gibson, has managed to find up to 15 pieces of aircraft debris and we hope that these three nations do more than just hope by fluke people find more debris,” she added.

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau confirmed in a statement that it had received debris from Gibson and was seeking advice from Malaysia on how Australia should proceed.

Jennifer Chong, a Melbourne-based Malaysian-Australian dual citizen whose husband was aboard Flight 370, wondered why Malaysia had not sent diplomats to the five-hour meeting with Australian search officials. China and Indonesia both sent diplomats to support their citizens.

Oceanographers are analyzing the first piece of wreckage found, a wing flap known as a flaperon that washed up on Reunion Island off the African coast in July last year – 16 months after the plane went missing – in the hope of narrowing a possible next area adjoining the current search boundary through drift modeling.

A wing flap found on Tanzania is also being examined at Australian Transport Safety Bureau headquarters for clues. Search officials expect more Flight 370 wreckage to wash up in the months ahead.

Sheryl Keen, chairwoman of Air Crash Support Group, which is supporting the relatives during their week in Australia, called on Malaysia to collect the debris found by Gibson on Madagascar and to consider handing responsibility for the search to Australia.

Story: Rod McGuirk

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Bangkok Moves to Contain Zika Outbreak

Workers fumigate a residence in Soi Ratchada 14 on Sept. 2. Photo: Pongvech Vechprasit

BANGKOK — City officials said Monday that adequate measures are being taken after it found 22 cases of Zika virus in Bangkok’s Sathon district, making for 29 confirmed cases in the capital this year.

Days after it emerged that a pregnant woman became infected with the virus which has been linked to birth defects, City Hall said it found 21 more cases in the area and moved aggressively to control mosquitoes and prevent further spread of infection.

Wanthanee Wattana of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration, or BMA, said the city has dispatched crews to fumigate the streets and remove standing water where mosquitoes breed to reduce the chance of transmission. She called for the public to help.

Read: More Awareness, Reporting Cited for Thailand’s Rise in Reported Zika Cases

“I would like to urge everyone to help BMA eliminate the mosquitoes also,” Wanthanee said.

Wathanee said the city was notified by a private hospital on Sept.1 about the infected woman. She was 24-weeks pregnant at the time of infection and has since recovered, she said.

“We have to admit there were Zika cases in Bangkok before,” said Wanthanee Wattana of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration. “The Sathon case was the eighth.”

Of the 22 Sathon cases, three people were infected while traveling outside the capital. Therefore the authorities have coordinated with provincial health officials to track down anyone who had contact with them.

Zika isn’t new to Thailand, but there were relatively few reported cases over the years. Both government officials and World Health Organization’s Thailand office concur the increase in reported Zika cases is the result of better surveillance, reporting and awareness of the disease.

Nationwide, there have been 97 cases in 16 provinces from January through August, according to a disease control official. Six provinces are being closely monitored.

The virus has surged across much of the world this past year and has been blamed for microcephaly, a condition of incomplete brain development, in babies born to women infected by it.

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Junta Revokes Military Trials for Civilians

Four political activists charged with violating the junta's ban on protest were brought on March 15, 2015 to the military court in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Civilians will no longer be tried by the military after the junta Monday revoked orders passed since it seized power over two years ago.

The order, issued under the junta leader’s absolute power granted by its interim charter, said civilians tried for cases involving national security will no longer go to military courts. The order, which went into immediate effect, is not retroactive and does not affect cases already underway.

The rationale given for the change was that conditions in the country have improved. After a junta-backed constitution was passed by voters in August, the junta said it sees public cooperation with its reform campaign.

“As we saw, the referendum went well and the draft constitution of Thailand won overwhelming approval from people,” read the order. “Therefore, all measures should be eased so every party can exercise their rights and duties as well as will be protected under the provisions of the new constitution that will be officially come into effect soon.”

When it seized power in 2014, the junta issued orders requiring military trials for cases involving the use of explosives, suspected royal defamation and anything deemed a threat to national security.

Activists have accused the military government of abusing these powers by using them to seize and detain its critics for political purposes.

Monday’s order does not revoke the military’s power to arrest, search and detain suspects in such cases for up to seven days.

The order said Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha may consider changing those provisions at a later time.

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One-Man Ambient Band To Perform Live in Bangkok

Jesse Beaman of My Empty Phantom performing in May. Photo: My Empty Phantom / Facebook

UPDATE: Show canceled

BANGKOK Texan one-man band My Empty Phantom will fly from the Lone Star State to Bangkok, where he will simultaneously play an array of instruments including the drums, the piano and the guitar whilst recording the sounds with the help of a loop pedal.

The result will culminate in a live show of experimental post-rock fused with hints of ambient music.

Local ambient sound artists 17September1981 and Plern Pan Perth aka Thanart Rasanont will perform an opening act on stage.

My Empty Phantom is a solo project by Jesse Beaman from Austin, Texas, who has been on tours in an array of countries, including France, Portugal, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Bulgaria and Mexico amongst others.

The ticket is 200 baht and includes one drink. My Empty Phantom Live In Bangkok starts at 7pm on Saturday at Brownstone Studios and Ageha Cafe. The studio-gallery-cafe building is located on Soi Sukhumvit 77 near Soi On Nut 25, and can be reached by motorbike from BTS On Nut.

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Beam, Climax Night Clubs Raided by Soldiers

Guests at Beam, a popular electronic dance music club in Bangkok’s Thonglor area, present urine to narcotics officers early Sunday morning.

BANGKOK — Soldiers raided and shut down three downtown nightclubs early Sunday morning.

Beam, a high-end dance club in Thonglor’s 72 Courtyard had more than 100 guests inside when it was stormed by soldiers and narcotics officers at 3am. Officers also raided two Soi Sukhumvit 11 venues: Climax in the basement of the Ambassador Hotel and the nearby Daawat Restaurant & Night Club.

Both Thai and foreign guests were asked to show identification and were tested for drugs. Officers said they did not find anyone testing positive for drugs or any underage drinking.

Forty hookahs and 2.5 kilograms of tobacco were confiscated from the Indian-style restaurant Daawat.

Col. Noppasit Sitthiphongsophon, who led the raid, said they had received complaints the clubs were open after 2am. He said the operators of all three clubs failed to present their licenses when asked.

Noppasit said he would hand the cases over for police to pursue further.

Since the military came to power in May 2014, it has brought Bangkok’s once free-wheeling nightlife to heel by more widely enforcing what were once negotiable closing times.

Under junta order No. 22 issued in July 2015, officers have the power to revoke the license of a club for five years if it is open past legal closing time.

Military raid and shut down Climax, a nightclub in Bangkok’s Soi Sukhumvit 11 early Sunday morning.
Military raid and shut down Climax, a nightclub in Bangkok’s Soi Sukhumvit 11 early Sunday morning.

Beam 3 Beam4 Beam5

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Leicester City Embark on Champions League Dream

Leicester's team manager Claudio Ranieri and player Wes Morgan lift the trophy as Leicester City celebrate becoming the English Premier League soccer champions last May at the King Power stadium in Leicester, England. Photo: Matt Dunham / Associated Press

LEICESTER, England — The closest Leicester got to a European trip in recent years was crossing the Welsh border to play Swansea in the Premier League.

Now, as the unlikely English champions, they’ll be visiting Belgium, Portugal and Denmark – and if all goes well, even more countries – for matches in their first-ever campaign in the Champions League.

Leicester is one of two newcomers in Europe’s elite club competition this season, along with Rostov following its second-place finish in the Russian league.

Both teams were fighting relegation in their respective domestic leagues just two seasons ago, yet now they are mixing it with the cream of the continent.

 

In its 132-year history, Leicester has only had four seasons of European competition – the last coming in 2000 in the now-defunct UEFA Cup after winning the English League Cup. That was Leicester’s last piece of major silverware before shocking the sporting world by winning the Premier League last season.

The intervening 16-year period was a bumpy ride for the central English club, which bobbed up and down between England’s top two divisions – and even spent a season in the third tier in 2008-09 – and also drifted close to financial ruin before being taken over by a Thai consortium in 2010.

The team, known as the Foxes, returned to the Premier League in 2014 and two years later they are the champions, completing the ultimate fairy tale journey.

There’s been something of a championship-winning hangover at Leicester, though, and the Champions League campaign, which starts at Club Brugge on Wednesday, will offer some respite after a sobering start to the Premier League title defense.

Having lost just three league games last season, Claudio Ranieri’s team has lost two of its opening four matches this season and the manner of the defeats will be a concern.

An opening-day 2-1 loss at promoted Hull and Saturday’s 4-1 loss at Liverpool highlighted how much the team is missing N’Golo Kante, the France midfielder sold to Chelsea in the offseason. Often it felt like Kante covered the ground of two players last season, offering excellent protection to a defense containing journeymen and even cast-offs.

With Kante gone, Leicester’s solidity has disappeared and the side looks open. Liverpool could easily have scored more than four goals at Anfield.

“We have to clear our minds,” Ranieri said, “and understand that in football we have to be strong, determined, aggressive and reactive.”

It’s not all doom and gloom for Leicester, however.

The club ended up being one of English football’s biggest spenders in the summer transfer window, breaking its transfer record twice to sign strikers Ahmed Musa, then Islam Slimani. The squad is now much deeper and stronger, while Ranieri managed to limit the major outgoings to just Kante, meaning key players Jamie Vardy and Riyad Mahrez are still on board.

In a sense, the pressure is off Leicester this season and it should just enjoy the Champions League campaign, especially considering its benign draw that will see the team also play FC Copenhagen and FC Porto. A couple of wins at its King Power stadium fortress and a place in the knockout stage could beckon.

“Once again, I say we are underdogs,” said Ranieri, who is embarking on a sixth Champions League campaign with a sixth different club.

And that’s just how they like it in Leicester.

Story: Steve Douglas

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Hillary Clinton’s Health Re-Emerges as Campaign Issue

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton waves as she walks from her daughter's apartment building Sunday in New York. Photo: Craig Ruttle / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton’s stumbles as she left Sunday’s 9/11 memorial ceremony put her health at the forefront of a presidential campaign in which the two major party nominees are among the oldest ever and have disclosed a limited amount of information about their medical history.

The Democratic presidential nominee “felt overheated” and left the ground zero ceremony after about 90 minutes, her campaign said. A video of her departure show Clinton appearing to stumble as three staff members hold her up and help her into a van.

While the former secretary of state later emerged from her daughter’s nearby apartment, saying she was “feeling great,” the episode focused attention on Clinton’s health with eight weeks remaining in a contentious election in which Republican rival Donald Trump has sought to sow doubt about her health and fitness to serve.

Trump has repeatedly questioned Clinton’s health, telling supporters last month she “lacks the mental and physical stamina” to serve as president and fight Islamic State militants. The billionaire businessman also attended Sunday’s memorial, and said “I don’t know anything” when asked about Clinton.

It’s an accusation that Clinton has sought to play off as a “wacky strategy” from Trump and evidence that he embraces an “alternative reality.” She poked fun of the idea during an appearance on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live” last month, jokingly opening a pickle jar as proof of her vigor.

Despite the intense focus on the Clinton’s falling ill on Sunday, Arthur Caplan, a bioethicist at New York University Langone Medical Center, said the moment told voters little about Clinton’s physical fitness.

“There are plenty of people who may stumble around on a hot humid day for lots of reasons,” Caplan said. “Without examining, without having the history … you don’t have a basis to say anything.”

In 2008, Republican nominee John McCain made public more than a thousand pages of his medical history to show he was cancer-free and fit to serve as president at age 71. Neither Clinton or Trump have released anything approaching that level of detail.

Dr. Lisa Bardack, an internist who has been Clinton’s personal doctor since 2001, released a two-page letter in July 2015 that said Clinton was in “excellent physical condition and fit to serve as president of the United States.”

Trump’s gastroenterologist, Dr. Harold Bornstein, wrote a four-paragraph letter claiming Trump would be “the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency.” He later told NBC News it took him just five minutes to write it.

While Clinton has released more information than Trump, Caplan said neither candidate has offered voters a sufficient record. He said that ideally, presidential nominees should allow an independent panel to assess their health.

“Since we can’t get that done for taxes, I don’t think we’re going to get it done for health,” he said, referencing Trump’s refusal to match Clinton’s release of her personal tax records.

At 69, Ronald Reagan was the oldest person to be elected president when he won in 1980. Trump turned 70 in June, whileClinton will have just turned 69 if she wins the White House.

But aging researcher S. Jay Olshansky, of the University of Illinois at Chicago, said Sunday that age alone shouldn’t be a disqualifier for presidential candidates. While people are increasingly vulnerable to illness as they age past 70, there are also better medical treatments than ever before. Our “concept of old,” he stressed, has changed.

“I don’t think age should be used at all,” Olshansky said. “We shouldn’t be judging people based on their age, but based on their ideas.”

Clinton’s health has been a lingering source of speculation among her critics, dating to well before she announced her second White House campaign. Republican strategist Karl Rove called a concussion Clinton sustained in 2012 a “serious health episode” and suggested two years later she may have suffered a brain injury.

Last week, Clinton had an extensive coughing fit during a Labor Day rally in Cleveland, making it difficult for her to speak for about two minutes. She drank water and took a lozenge at the podium, going on to finish her remarks.

She also struggled with a cough during a question-and-answer session with reporters aboard her campaign plane last week. She said she suffers from seasonal allergies and had increased her dosage of antihistamines.

In a campaign podcast last month, Clinton said she does yoga and walks on the treadmill to stay fit. Trump, who famously dines regularly on fast food, has said he gets most of his exercise from playing golf and speaking at a podium during his campaign rallies. He plans to discuss his health regimen this week during an appearance on “The Dr. Oz Show.”

Clinton’s supporters have dismissed questions about her health by pointing to her globe-trotting schedule as secretary of state and lengthy appearance before Congress investigating the 2012 Benghazi attack, in which she sat for 11 hours.

Asked last week if she was concerned about “conspiracy theories” related to her health, Clinton said she wasn’t.

“There are so many of them,” she said, “I’ve lost track of them.”

Story: Ken Thomas, Catherine Lucey

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Thousands of Naked Bicyclists Swarm City of Brotherly Love

Cyclists in the 2015 Philly Naked Bike Ride. Photo: Rashaad Jorden / Flickr

PHILADELPHIA — Thousands of bicyclists dared to be bare for the city’s annual nude ride promoting positive body image, cycling advocacy and fuel conservation.

About 3,000 people gathered Saturday for the eighth annual Philly Naked Bike Ride through the city’s streets. They set off from a park near the Philadelphia Museum of Art, where Sylvester Stallone ran up the steps in the “Rocky” movies.

The annual ride featured people sporting underwear, body paint, glitter or nothing at all. Some riders concerned about being recognized by their parents or co-workers wore masks while others wore just their shoes.

“It’s a really open and fun way of destigmatizing nudity,” said Oren Eisenberg, who was riding nude for the fifth time.

The 12-mile ride through the City of Brotherly Love is among many related to the World Naked Bike Ride movement. The riders pedal through the City of Brotherly Love past popular spots such as Independence Hall and Rittenhouse Square, where crowds cheer them on.

The Philly Naked Bike Ride, or PNBR, is a clothing optional bare-as-you-dare event, meaning participants can wear as much or as little as they want. Organizers say it’s an invitation to be naked but they want people to be comfortable and have fun no matter how much skin they expose.

Lots of the riders sprayed or splashed on body paint or let artists, led by Matt Deifer, do it for them. Deifer said he painted hundreds of them in Wildfire Visible Luminescent Paint colors including brilliant yellow, bright orange and deep blue.

Some riders held signs with slogans promoting their causes — or painted them on their breasts and backs.

“Nude not crude! Born this way,” was the message on Ben Heidari’s back.

PNBR volunteer Magda Esposito, a former chef and librarian, posed au naturel for fliers and videos promoting the event, went on test rides to help design this year’s route and vetted photographers seeking access to the pre-ride bodypainting area. She said she donated her time because she was inspired by the ride’s causes.

“Positive body image is something we all need a little more of,” she said, “and this is a fun and positive way to bring attention to it.”

Story: Dino Hazell

 

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Trump’s Emotional Intelligence Deficit

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump smiles as he participates in an August roundtable discussion on national security in his offices in Trump Tower in New York. Photo: Gerald Herbert / Associated Press

CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts – Last month, 50 former national security officials who had served at high levels in Republican administrations from Richard Nixon to George W. Bush published a letter saying they would not vote for their party’s presidential nominee, Donald Trump. In their words, “a President must be disciplined, control emotions, and act only after reflection and careful deliberation.” Simply put, “Trump lacks the temperament to be President.”

In the terminology of modern leadership theory, Trump is deficient in emotional intelligence – the self-mastery, discipline, and empathic capacity that allows leaders to channel their personal passions and attract others. Contrary to the view that feelings interfere with thinking, emotional intelligence – which includes two major components, mastery of the self and outreach to others – suggests that the ability to understand and regulate emotions can make overall thinking more effective.

While the concept is modern, the idea is not new. Practical people have long understood its importance in leadership. In the 1930s, former Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, a crusty old veteran of the American Civil War, was taken to meet Franklin D. Roosevelt, a fellow Harvard graduate but one who had not been a distinguished student. Asked later about his impressions of the new president, Holmes famously quipped: “second-class intellect; first-class temperament.” Most historians would agree that Roosevelt’s success as a leader rested more on his emotional than his analytical IQ.

Psychologists have tried to measure intelligence for more than a century. General IQ tests measure such dimensions of intelligence as verbal comprehension and perceptual reasoning, but IQ scores predict only about 10-20% of variation in life success. The 80% that remains unexplained is the product of hundreds of factors playing out over time. Emotional intelligence is one of them.

Some experts argue that emotional intelligence is twice as important as technical or cognitive skills. Others suggest it plays a more modest role. Moreover, psychologists differ about how the two dimensions of emotional intelligence – self-control and empathy – relate to each other. Bill Clinton, for example, scored low on the first but high on the second. Nonetheless, they agree that emotional intelligence is an important component of leadership. Richard Nixon probably had a higher IQ than Roosevelt, but much lower emotional intelligence.

Leaders use emotional intelligence to manage their “charisma” or personal magnetism across changing contexts. We all present ourselves to others in a variety of ways in order to manage the impressions we make: for example, we “dress for success.” Politicians, too, “dress” differently for different audiences. Ronald Reagan’s staff was famous for its effectiveness in managing impressions. Even a tough general like George Patton used to practice his scowl in front of a mirror.

Successful management of personal impressions requires some of the same emotional discipline and skill possessed by good actors. Acting and leadership have a great deal in common. Both combine self-control with the ability to project. Reagan’s prior experience as a Hollywood actor served him well in this regard, and Roosevelt was a consummate actor as well. Despite his pain and difficulty in moving on his polio-crippled legs, FDR maintained a smiling exterior, and was careful to avoid being photographed in the wheelchair he used.

Humans, like other primate groups, focus their attention on the leader. Whether CEOs and presidents realize it or not, the signals they convey are always closely watched. Emotional intelligence involves awareness and control of such signals, and the self-discipline that prevents personal psychological needs from distorting policy. Nixon, for example, could strategize effectively on foreign policy; but he was less able to manage the personal insecurities that caused him to create an “enemies list” and eventually led to his downfall.

Trump has some of the skills of emotional intelligence. He is an actor whose experience hosting a reality-television show enabled him to dominate the crowded Republican primary field and attract considerable media attention. Dressing for the occasion in his signature red baseball cap with the slogan “Make America Great Again,” he appeared to have gamed the system with a winning strategy of using “politically incorrect” statements to focus attention on himself and gain enormous free publicity.

But Trump has proven deficient in terms of self-control, leaving him unable to move toward the center for the general election. Likewise, he has failed to display the discipline needed to master the details of foreign policy, with the result that, unlike Nixon, he comes across as naive about world affairs.

Trump has a reputation as a bully in interactions with peers, but that is not bad per se. As the Stanford psychologist Roderick Kramer has pointed out, President Lyndon Johnson was a bully, and many Silicon Valley entrepreneurs have a bullying style. But Kramer calls such figures bullies with a vision that inspires others to want to follow them.

And Trump’s narcissism has led him to overreact, often counter-productively, to criticism and affronts. For example, he became embroiled in a dispute with an American Muslim couple whose son, a US soldier, was killed in Iraq, and in a petty feud with Paul Ryan, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, after Trump felt slighted. In such cases, Trump stepped on his own message.

It is this deficiency in his emotional intelligence that has cost Trump the support of some of the most distinguished foreign policy experts in his party and in the country. In their words, “he is unable or unwilling to separate truth from falsehood. He does not encourage conflicting views. He lacks self-control and acts impetuously. He cannot tolerate criticism.” Or, as Holmes might say, Trump has been disqualified by his second-class temperament.

Joseph S. Nye, Jr. teaches at Harvard and is the author of Is the American Century Over?

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2016.
www.project-syndicate.org

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