Trump’s Racist Tweets Prompt Foundations to Speak Out
Foundation and nonprofit leaders have been stepping forward in recent days to denounce racist tweets from Donald Trump.
"We’re living in a moment where foundations and nonprofits are recognizing that the values expressed on their websites are more than words," said Stefan Lanfer, chairman of the Communications Network. "There’s an opportunity to give voice to them, and that matters just as much as the work in this time of greater and greater urgency."
Lanfer is also director of communications for the Barr Foundation, led by Jim Canales, one of the more vocal foundation leaders to speak out against the president in recent weeks.
Many foundation leaders began speaking up weeks ago, soon after Trump made his now infamous "go back" comments aimed at Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and three other minority women in Congress. Don Howard, CEO of the James Irvine Foundation, bemoaned the "ugly" state of discourse about immigration issues in a blog post. "We look forward to working with those who seek to reunite us around our historic American values of inclusion, refuge, and diversity," he wrote.
Trump’s attacks last weekend on African-American lawmaker Elijah Cummings sparked a fresh round of condemnation from grant makers. Howard said in a statement to the Chronicle that his organization wants to maintain a "nonpartisan, nonideological" stance, but "for Irvine, this is not political at all; we stand with our grantees and fellow Californians when they, or the communities they serve and represent, are attacked."
Howard added, "We respect other foundations’ decisions on when to speak out — and are encouraged at how many leaders in philanthropy have done so about things that concern them."
Loren Harris, chief program and strategy officer at the Kenneth Rainin Foundation, said he has also noticed that more foundations have been speaking up. He hopes there will be more public comments, columns, and statements that condemn racism and racist rhetoric made by the president and other politicians. "Our board, our staff, and our CEO are committed to equity," he said. "It’s deeply rooted in our mission to counter racism and hate."
He said the foundation tries to lead by example and has a history of speaking up about current events. For example, Jennifer Rainin, the CEO, wrote about political and social discord after the Charlottesville riots in 2017. Harris said the Rainin Foundation will continue to respond publicly when events call for it.
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Source: The Chronical of Philanthropy