Eleanor Roosevelt Leadership Quotes

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To handle yourself, use your head; to handle others, use your heart.
Eleanor Roosevelt
Good leaders inspire people to have confidence in their leader. Great leaders inspire people to have confidence in themselves.
Eleanor Roosevelt
Eleanor Roosevelt commented, "Life is like a parachute jump; you've got to get it right the first time.
John C. Maxwell (The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership: Follow Them and People Will Follow You)
It was the flexibility, the originality, and the independence of thought—combined, of course, with our vast resources—that made American business grow so rapidly. If the seeds of growth are made sterile, if men become passive followers instead of developing qualities of leadership—and courage—we may find someday that our way of life has been superseded.
Eleanor Roosevelt (You Learn by Living: Eleven Keys for a More Fulfilling Life)
Both Eleanor Roosevelt and Louis Howe recognized from the outset that Franklins spirit would be destroyed if his political ambitions were throttled. If he didn’t have political hope; he would die spiritually, intellectually and in his personality.
Doris Kearns Goodwin (Leadership: In Turbulent Times)
We no longer have merely domestic issues. Perhaps the best illustration of this is the question I am asked everywhere in the world: “We hear you Americans pay to keep land out of production because there is too much to eat. Is there no better way to use your ability to produce food than to get rid of it?” This is a home question; it is literally of vital moment to the millions of starving in the world who look to us. I do not see how we can retain world leadership and yet continue to handle our problems as though they concerned us alone; they concern the world. We feel that a surplus of food is only an embarrassment. We solve it as though only we were concerned. But think of the hungry people and their bitterness as the food that could save their lives is plowed under. To say they think it highly unfair is to put it mildly. We have never put our best brains to work on the ways we can produce to the maximum, give our farmers a better income, and still employ our surpluses in a way to solve the pressing needs of the world, without upsetting our economy or that of friendly nations who might fear we were giving food to markets they are accustomed to selling to.
Eleanor Roosevelt (The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt)
Eleanor Roosevelt on the changes in John F. Kennedy that led her to drop her opposition to his nomination for president: "He has the qualities of a scholar, and a sense of history. I had the feeling that he was the man who can learn. I like him better than I ever had before because he seemed so little caulk-sure, and I think he has a mind that is open to new ideas.
David Pietrusza (1960--LBJ vs. JFK vs. Nixon: The Epic Campaign That Forged Three Presidencies)
To handle yourself, use your head; to handle others, use your heart.” — ELEANOR ROOSEVELT
David Robinson (The Substance of Leadership: A Practical Framework for Effectively Leading a High-Performing Team)
To compound the innovative nature of the new administration, Eleanor Roosevelt held her own first press conference at the same time that day. She made a rule that only female reporters could attend, which meant that all over the country conservative publishers had to hire their first female reporters. Indeed, because of Eleanor Roosevelt’s weekly press conferences, an entire generation of female journalists got their start.
Doris Kearns Goodwin (Leadership: In Turbulent Times)