In the midst of federal job layoffs, and the increasing handwringing by Black female supporters of former presidential candidate Kamala Harris on whether to rest or help others fight during the next four years, an intriguing conference â dubbed The Opportunity Summit – gathered last week in both the U.S. Capitol and Hart Senate Office Building.
This coming together featured an unusual political spectrum of very successful Black business owners and no less than twelve senators from both sides of the political aisle, including Republican Senators Ted Cruz (Texas) and Pete Ricketts (Nebraska) and New York Stock Exchange chairman Jeffrey C. Sprecher and his wife, newly appointed administrator of the Small Business Administration Kelly Loeffler.
Suggested Reading
Among its prominent speakers were Republican Senator Tim Scott and Democratic Senator Raphael Warnock, who at one point genuinely referred to Senator Scott as âmy brother.â
If not quite the Illuminati, all this star power felt at least like a gathering of todayâs âTalented Tenth.â This was an effort to engage in meaningful dialogue with a bipartisan group of businesspeople and policymakers â which is important because a lot of people just engage solely on the left or on the right. But these were men and women who say, âLook, we want to engage with both parties to talk about how we want, as a Black business community, to be a part of this expanding economy.â
One of the hosts, Walter Davis, a Charlotte business leader, set the tone of the event right from the start: âThis is all about engagement. You know, thereâs a lot swirling right now. Someone recently said to me that Black women are disengaging because they donât want to support people who donât support us â so weâll just focus on us. But we donât have a choice but to engage. Frederick Douglass didnât disengage. Martin Luther King didnât disengage. If you want change, you have to engage.â
Or, in the words of Senator Tim Scott in addressing the conference: âOur relatives have paid too high of a price for us not to see discomfort as a motivating factor for our success. I can be a victim, or I can be victorious. But I couldnât be both. What matters is our ability to persevere. We come from people who are victorious through perseverance.â
Loren Douglass, from the Harvey C. Russell, Jr., Institute for International Business and Strategic Coalitions, offered an even more direct, practical take: âWe now know that affirmative action and DEI are things of the past â so weâre going to harness the power of the markets to make affirmative action and DEI irrelevant.â He also pointed out that the American economy has historically grown at a 1.5% clip, while the average return on capital has been 45%. What this means is that youâve got to own to accumulate wealth. This is a âcapitalistâ economy and not one powered by wages.
Not that this is anything easy. In particular, Warnock framed the reality for Black individuals: âWe all know that this is a system weâve always been a part of, although that system has not always recognized our contributions, has not, for that matter, always recognized our humanity. And in many ways, we find ourselves in that fight again, but weâre not new to this fight, and weâre ready.â
Indeed, thereâs no value to be found in sitting out these four years. In fact, there are tremendous economic opportunities that promise to present themselves if we stay engaged.
âItâs incredibly important for us to figure out how to unlock capital for disadvantaged communities,â said Senator Scott. âMy goal is to set the kind of parameters that allows for $1 trillion of capital to be set free in disadvantaged communities in the next 10 years. I believe we can get even to $2 trillionâŠ. What does that take? It takes us creating a little more flexibility on the resources that we create for affordable housing. It also takes financial inclusion.â
For those of us disengaged, note that this is a Republican talking â and not simply a Republican but the chair of the Senate Banking Committee.âIf youâre not about red or blue, but youâre about green,â Scott concluded, âAnd youâre agnostic about the person bringing the assistance, let us celebrate the people who bring the assistance to you.â
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.