Let me finish tonight with this.
A leader must have a mission—an American leader, especially. We are a frontier people: happiest, most excited, most American when we’re on a quest. Presidents need to know that. Great presidents know it because it’s who they are, why they set out to lead us in the first place.
All our great leaders—Washington, Lincoln, FDR, John F. Kennedy—were men with a mission.
Washington led us into nationhood. He defeated the most powerful military force in the world basically by a brilliant campaign of retreat along the Delaware ’til he caught the British sleeping at Trenton, outsmarted them again at Princeton.
Then he did something remarkable, setting the model that made him truly great, walking away from power twice—first as the winning commander of the revolution, and then as our first elected leader.
He would have been without match until Abraham Lincoln came along, championing a bloody Civil War that cost us 600,000 countrymen shooting each other across fields at point-blank range, with their blue and grey uniforms their only cover. He emancipated slaves, then ripped the institution from our Constitution for good, and through it all, began the healing.








