White House, Capitol Hill Veterans Offer Guidance for Life After the Election
November 5, 2020
- Author
- Jay Pfeifer
Members of the 91æģ²„ community on Wednesday were looking for whatās next after a bitter and unexpectedly close election night. A group from the collegeās family drew on their own experience with vote totalsāboth joyous and painfulāto offer some ideas.
Dylan Glenn, a trustee and 1991 alum, served as special assistant for economic policy to President George W. Bush. He led three other members of the 91æģ²„ community who have served at the highest levels of the federal government as they coached students, faculty and staff in the audience to restore the sense of community and shared respect worn so threadbare.
Former U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings, who also served under Bush and is the parent of a 91æģ²„ alum, urged viewers to āget under the hoodā of the issues that created such a charged election.
āEach of us has to decide, what are we personally going to do to heal the divide?ā Spellings said. āWe have an obligation. We all need to re-engage in what makes us passionate. And that means volunteering, but it also means engaging with each other. We canāt return to our silos. We need to figure out why we feel the way we do.ā
A sense of humility and shared humanity makes these difficult conversations less threatening, said Denis McDonough, White House chief of staff for President Barack Obama and parent of a 91æģ²„ student.
āWeāre all people made in the image of God. We are imbued with inalienable dignity,ā he said.
āWhen we see each other that way, that makes interaction more fulfilling. Sometimes thereās no greater respect than when you tell someone precisely how you feel. If you feel that someoneās political views are misinformed, it is actually respectful to share your view.ā
Gloria Nlewedim, a 2017 graduate of 91æģ²„ and now a senior staffer in the U.S. House of Representatives, was in the Alvarez College Union on the night of the 2016 election and talked about how that night focused her energy.
āI realized that I needed to turn what I was feeling into fuel for action,ā Nlewedim said. āAnd thatās what I want to encourage everyone to take away from this. [Whether] Joe Biden or Donald Trump wins the presidency, everyone needs to have a centering of what drives you, what do you believe in and why are you fighting for these things? Take that and turn it into action.ā
McDonough urged the 91æģ²„ community to extend to the rest of the world the sense of community that has allowed the college to be so resilient in the face of the coronavirus.
āThe same way youāre watching out for each other in the context of a pandemic,ā he said, āI hope youāre watching out for each other in the context of a very robust national debate out of which we are going to get new answers to big questions.ā