We are living in a moment when values, morals, and ETHICS IN GOVERNING
SEEM TO BE FADING AS THE FOUNDATION OF GOVERNING AND AT THE SAME TIME
POWER SEEMS TO BE ASCENDING AS A TOUCHSTONE. The ANNUAL KIPLINGER
LECTURE AND ITS HISTORICAL BASIS IN THE IMPORTANCE OF ETHICS IN
AMERICAN SOCIETY COULD NOT BE MORE TIMELY. Sylvia Mathews Burwell
speaks to what it means to govern with a moral compass: to place the
common good above personal or political gain, to lead with care in
deeply divided times, and the importance of the difference between
power and authority. Join us for an engaging conversation about why
ETHICS STILL BELONG AT THE HEART OF GOVERNMENT, and what public
service demands.Sylvia Mathews Burwell is a distinguished public
servant who was recently the 15th President of American University,
from 2017 to 2024. Prior to that, she was the Secretary of the
Department of Health and Human Services and earlier the Director of
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), under President Obama.
Before OMB, she was President of the Walmart Foundation and also was
President of the Global Development Program at the Bill and Melinda
Gates Foundation. She also served as Deputy Director of OMB, Deputy
Chief of Staff to the President, Chief of Staff to the Secretary of
the Treasury, and Staff Director of the National Economic Council. She
is currently President of the Board of Overseers of Harvard
University, her alma mater. She was also a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford.
She hails from Hinton, West Virginia and she and her husband Stephen
live in Washington, DC with their two teenage children.
RSVP Today. Please let us know how many people to expect by
registering in advance for this FREE event. And please plan to arrive
at least 30 minutes in advance to have the best chance of finding a
seat in the main hall. We will also have overflow seating available in
the Library with sound and video.
education
politics
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02/03/2026 Last update
Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Congregation
9601 Cedar Lane, Bethesda, 20814, Maryland, United States