Harvard hosts panel on bridging political divide featuring only Democrats, NAACP president
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This article is a segment of Fox News Digital’s investigative series, Campus Radicals. Explore the complete series here.

An event at Harvard University, intended to explore ways of bridging the partisan gap, notably included only individuals from the political left. The panel comprised two former Democratic politicians alongside the leader of a prominent organization advocating for progressive causes.

The discussion, held on October 9 and titled “Across the Divide: Organizing to Build Bridges in Partisan Times,” featured ex-Democratic Representative Joe Kennedy, former New Orleans Mayor and Louisiana Lieutenant Governor Mitch Landrieu, and Derrick Johnson, the President of the NAACP. The session was moderated by Alison King, a former NBC Boston journalist.

In his opening remarks, Derrick Johnson expressed his concerns, stating, “When I heard the initial question about the political divide, I kind of shift, because we no longer have a political divide, we have a national crisis in our democracy.”

Harvard students walking through gate surrounded by brick wall and building

Two women walk through a gate from Harvard Yard at Harvard University, Sept. 30, 2025, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

He then invoked Democratic talking points about the current government shutdown.

“And as we look at the government shutdown now, let me share my opinion,” he said. “It’s based on two basic things. How can they further cut or gut the Affordable Care Act, and/or distract from the Epstein files. So I don’t think there’s a political divide anymore, I think it’s a national crisis of our democracy.”

Landrieu, who served as the co-chair of Kamala Harris’ unsuccessful 2024 presidential campaign and as the co-chair of the 2024 Democratic National Convention, opened by bragging about “taking down four Confederate monuments in New Orleans.”

Landrieu also served in the Biden administration as the senior advisor for coordinating the implementation of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

President and CEO of the NAACP Derrick Johnson speaks on Day one of the Democratic National Conventio

President and CEO of the NAACP Derrick Johnson speaks at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Aug. 19, 2024. (Reuters/Mike Segar)

He said his organization, E Pluribus Unum, focuses on reaching across the political aisle to teach people about diversity and how to talk about race.

He then pivoted to defending DEI, and without prompting, attacked Secretary of War Pete Hegseth.

“Like, Pete Hegseth is not qualified. You feel me on this? He’s a DEI hire,” he said, receiving applause from the audience, before launching into more left-wing talking points.

“In my opinion, diversity is the nation’s greatest strength. It is our superpower,” said Landrieu. “That word indivisibility means that we’re so tightly bound that when we do it this way nobody can beat us. And when we come out of many and become one, nobody has ever beaten the United States of America when we did it.”

Mitch Landrieu appears on stage on Day 2 of the Democratic National Convention

Mitch Landrieu appears on stage during the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Aug. 20, 2024. (Reuters/Mike Segar)

Kennedy founded an organization called The Groundwork Project, which he said has had a “great partner” in the NAACP “from the beginning.”

“In the fight to defend American democracy, frontline community organizers are our single most impactful asset,” the organization’s website says. It goes on to claim that “anti-democracy” forces in the Deep South, Appalachia and the Plains have been organizing “largely unopposed for generations.”

“Today, these investments are bearing fruit, as anti-democracy forces are using the awesome civic power they have accrued in these places to threaten bodily autonomy, public education, voting rights, climate action and democratic freedom for us all,” the site says.

Kennedy also criticized President Donald Trump during his comments on the panel.

Joe Kennedy III

Rep. Joe Kennedy III speaks outside his campaign headquarters after conceding defeat to incumbent Sen. Edward Markey, Sept. 1, 2020, in the Massachusetts Democratic Senate primary. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

“Donald Trump is telling a story of America,” Kennedy said. “And it’s compelling enough to a sizable enough population that that is a story that’s being written about America. One story of America. That is not my belief of the story of America.”

He complained that Democrats have to defend the “status quo” against Trump while also defending democracy.

“One of the jiu-jitsus Donald Trump did in the last couple of years, was he made a Democratic Party that had traditionally been the party of trying to erode those power centers from corporate America or the consolidation of political power to in certain channels, to erode that and make it more diffuse, to empower everybody, to expand ‘we,’” he said. “He flipped that and made the Democrats, all of a sudden, defending the World Trade Organization, and defending rule of law, and defending the status quo. Defending democracy at a time when people said, ‘I can’t make ends meet.’”

“The question now is, ‘How does the Democratic Party define itself in the midst of this administration being both an establishment, because they’ve got the House, the Senate and the presidency and they are in power so by definition an establishment, and tearing down the structures of those same institutions?’”

A spokesperson for the Harvard Kennedy School told Fox News Digital that the school hosts a broad spectrum of political leaders from both sides of the political aisle.

“To become good public leaders, our students must learn to engage across disagreements and partisan lines — so we intentionally bring voices to campus from all across the political spectrum,” the statement said. “Harvard Kennedy School is proud to be one of the only places in America where students can engage with politicians from both ends of the political spectrum like Nancy Mace and Pramila Jayapal, with managers of both presidential campaigns, or with senior advisors of President Biden and President Trump — often in the same day or even the same hour.”

harvard-university

A spokesperson for the Harvard Kennedy School told Fox News Digital that the school hosts a broad spectrum of political leaders from both sides of the political aisle. (Blake Nissen for The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

“The purpose of this event was for leaders to talk about the importance of building bridges across our political divide, which is an important goal regardless of the political affiliations of the speakers,” the statement continued. “A specific event like this may contain viewpoints that people on any side might find unbalanced, but there is always another event — and another speaker — providing a different perspective.”

The school noted that it has recently hosted high-profile conservatives like Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner, former Trump advisors Kellyanne Conway, Chris LaCivita, former Ambassador Nikki Haley, former Vice President Mike Pence, CNN commentator Scott Jennings, former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, former Gov. Eric Holcomb, former Sen. Pat Toomey, Sen. Rick Scott, former Gov. Asa Hutchinson, former Ambassador John Bolton and many others.

It specifically pointed to Pence’s call for politicians to “disagree without being disagreeable.”

“Since the founding of the Institute of Politics, our mission has been to engage with the left, right, and center of the American political spectrum — and we remain deeply committed to that mission today.”

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