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Carnegie Forum on
Money and Politics
On January 26, 2004, Carnegie Corporation of New York held a forum
on Money and Politics, with Senator John McCain (R-AZ) as the featured
speaker. A panel discussion followed Senator McCain’s keynote address; it focused on the future of campaign finance reform and included Charles E.
Kolb, president, Committee for Economic Development; Chellie Pingree,
president, Common Cause; and Trevor Potter, general counsel, The
Reform Institute, all Corporation grantees.
One month before the forum took place, the U.S. Supreme
Court issued a landmark decision that essentially upheld Congress’
right to limit the influence of money
in politics. The ruling meant that most of the Bipartisan Campaign
Reform Act—
more popularly known as the McCain-Feingold law, after the two senators
who sponsored it, McCain and Russell Feingold (D-WI)—would
stand, and would apply to the 2004 presidential election.
Over more than a decade, the Corporation’s
investment in campaign finance reform—nearly $20 million—is
viewed by many as having had a major role in building the “modern”
campaign finance reform movement. In introducing Senator McCain
to the approximately 100 policymakers, leaders in the nonprofit field,
voting rights and other activists gathered at the forum, Vartan
Gregorian said, “Campaign finance reform
is not a Democratic or Republican issue—it is an American
issue. To keep our democracy strong and vital, we all have to work
toward clean elections, toward reducing the influence of money and
special interests in the choices available to us as citizens.”
Echoing Gregorian’s concerns, McCain pointed
to the Supreme Court decision, saying the Court had made it clear
that “money is not free speech.” He also credited much
of the success of the McCain-Feingold legislation to the fact that
“enough Americans were aroused by the issues that they demanded
that we bring about change” in the way we fund election campaigns.
He concluded his remarks by saying, “There is great dissatisfaction
throughout the country with the state of politics in America,”
and called for bipartisan reform in a number of other areas, including
Social Security and Medicare.
The 2003 Carnegie
Medals of Philanthropy are Awarded
In 1901, Andrew Carnegie sold his vast steel empire to J.P. Morgan
for $480 million (the equivalent today of approximately $10.1 billion).
With that sale, the second phase of the industrialist’s life
began—that of philanthropist. Many also mark the date as the
beginning of the modern era of philanthropy. For the next 18 years,
until he died in 1919, Carnegie proceeded to give away the vast
bulk of his fortune with a single purpose in mind: the betterment
of humankind.
On December 10, 2001, the 22 nonprofit and philanthropic
organizations that Andrew Carnegie created—in the U.S. and
abroad—inaugurated the Andrew Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy
to mark the centennial observance of the beginning of Carnegie’s
philanthropic career by recognizing individuals who, like Andrew
Carnegie, have dedicated their private wealth to the public good
and who have made long-term philanthropic contributions in the United
States and throughout the world. At that time, it was announced
that the Carnegie Medals would be awarded every two years.
Carnegie Corporation of New York hosted the first medals ceremony,
which was initiated by the Corporation’s president, Vartan
Gregorian. Walter and Leonore Annenberg, Brooke Astor, Irene Diamond,
the Gates Family, the Rockefeller Family, George Soros and Ted Turner
were the first honorees.
“We seek to reinvigorate and challenge the
philanthropic community for tomorrow,” said Gregorian at the
2001 presentation.
On December 8, 2003, the Carnegie Institution of
Washington held the second medal awards, presenting the Andrew Carnegie
Medal of Philanthropy to the Sainsbury family of Great Britain and
Dr. Kazuo Inamori of Japan.
In the Sainsbury family, one of Great Britain’s
most notable philanthropic powerhouses, Andrew Carnegie’s
vision of philanthropy thrives. Today, there are 19 Sainsbury trusts,
set up by 18 different family members spanning more than three generations.
They support a wide variety of causes—from the arts and mental
health to education and the environment—in regions as diverse
as sub-Saharan Africa, Russia and the U.K.
Dr. Kazuo Inamori, Japan’s well-known, self-made
business visionary, lives his belief that one should contribute
both materially and spiritually to society. Throughout his legendary
business career, Inamori has used his gains to promote academic
and cultural development and international understanding. His Inamori
Foundation, with its annual Nobel-class Kyoto prizes, the Abshire-Inamori
Leadership Academy at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies, and his endowed university chairs are among his many means
for contributing to the world community. His book, A Passion
for Success, outlines his philosophy that philanthropy is part
of a productive life.
The next Carnegie medals will be awarded in 2005.
A Nation at Risk
Revisited
In 1983, when the 18-member National Commission on Excellence in
Education issued its report, A Nation at Risk: The Imperative
for Educational Reform, concern about the status of American
education in the United States resulted in an unanticipated level
of public attention and debate. The report famously warned that,
“Our Nation is at risk. The educational foundations of our
society are presently being eroded by a rising tide of mediocrity
that threatens our very future as a Nation and a people.”
In the years that followed, many educational reforms
were undertaken, among them, a governors’ conference on education
convened by then-President George Bush, which was directly inspired
by the report; 13 years later, President George W. Bush signed the
landmark No Child Left Behind legislation into law. But for all
the debate, increased spending, and national attention, how much
has teaching and learning improved in the nation’s schools
since the release of A Nation at Risk more than two decades
earlier?
That question was discussed at an October 23 symposium,
which focused on Reflecting on Two Decades of Reform—a
celebration of the 20th anniversary of the findings of the Nation
at Risk report. The Corporation hosted the gathering along
with the California-based J. Paul Getty Trust, bringing together
the remaining 12 members of the Commission and about 75 other educational
leaders, including U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige, former
U.S. Secretary of Education Richard W. Riley and New York City Schools
Chancellor Joel Klein. The current chairman of the Trust, David
Gardner, had served as the chairman of the National Commission on
Excellence in Education.
The symposium consisted of two panel discussions,
one looking back on the report’s legacy and another panel
looking forward to the future of education. Many symposium participants
agreed that America is still educationally at risk, and that a number
of the reforms urged by A Nation at Risk and subsequent
reports—including improving teacher education—remain
unfinished. Even so, as Vartan Gregorian, president of Carnegie
Corporation of New York, pointed out, “As the result of A
Nation at Risk—and the growing body of research on how
children learn and what constitutes good teaching—we have
come a long way. The challenge ahead of us is to continue to improve
our schools and the quality of American education.” |