Voting rights advocate Stacey Abramsâ Jan. 22 keynote address for focused on the pressing need for moral courage, which she said involved a willingness not merely to hold power, but âto share that power, and to believe in the freedom that comes with that power.â
Echoing the theme of this yearâs MLK celebration, âMoral Courage in the Face of Change and Uncertainty,â Abrams told the 250 people gathered in the ballroom of the Hanover Inn and other Dartmouth community members viewing a livestream video of the event that it is important to band together to combat injustice, wherever it comes from and whatever shape it takes.
âMoral courage provides shelter. It provides sustenance, and it provides change. And in the words of Dr. King, it is a dream. We should all be able to dream. And I say to each of you tonight, as we discuss and debate, we have the power of moral courage. So get it done.â
One of six children raised in Mississippi to church-going, community-minded parents (her father was a shipyard worker, her mother a librarian), Abrams said her voting rights activism was spawned at Spelman College.
She served for 11 years in Georgiaâs House of Representatives and was the Democratic nominee for governor in Georgia in 2018 and 2022. Abrams has launched nonprofit organizations dedicated to protecting democracy and co-founded businesses that support financial growth and infrastructure development. Sheâs also penned political thrillers, childrenâs books, and two New York Times bestsellers: Our Time is Now: Power, Purpose, and the Fight for a Fair America, and Lead from the Outside: How to Build Your Future and Make Real Change.
Abrams said she was dismayed by the series of federal executive orders this week directed at immigration and programs promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion, among other issues.
âIt feels like these have been terrible days,â Abrams said. âAnd in a moment where we know so many communities are under siege, when so many are being labeled as the problem, we are tempted to think that we are too late. That there was a date a few months ago where we could have created change, but now itâs done. That we have to live with what weâve got.â
But that is not the case, she asserted.
âI grew up with parents and grandparents in a community that never believed that today was the last day,â she said, âbecause every next moment, every next action, every next decisionâthatâs possibility. What we have now is an understanding of the flurry of executive orders. We now know what we face. The question is what are we going to do about it?â
One of the executive orders would terminate DEI programs across the federal government.
Abrams said the programs donât give people preferred treatment, but rather provide everyone with an equal footing, using the metaphor of providing a step-stool or ladder to people who are not tall enough to see over a fence.
âIâve spent the last year and a half working on DEI,â Abrams said. âPart of our responsibility is to make sure people understand it. Itâs been recently demonized because itâs working, because as a nation for (more than) 248 years, we have done the work of living up to our values.â

Earlier in her speech, Abrams said Dartmouth, with its resources, âis also giving birth and giving life and giving opportunity to extraordinary young men and women, to folks whose minds can change the future. And there is nothing more courageous in this moment than giving them permission to be the people they are, and to say the things they need to say and be as loud as they can about the future that they stand to inherit.â
For doing just that, Abrams commended Jared Pugh â25, president of Dartmouthâs chapter of the NAACP, who spoke at the event about Ronald McKeithen, a fellow Alabamian who, after serving a 37-year prison sentence, devoted his life to public service. âOppression and trauma is not an invitation to forego hope,â Pugh said. âIn the words of Dr. King, âthe ultimate measure of a person is not where they stand in moments of comfort and convenience, but where they stand at times of challenge and controversy.ââ
Abramsâ discussion of moral courage and leadership resonated with Emma Tsosie â25, a member of the Picuris East Pueblo and DinĂŠ Tribes in New Mexico, who attended the keynote with her friend, Sydney Hoose â25, a member of the Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma.

âOne of the things that is sticking with me is this idea that nothing happens alone, especially when it comes to leadership,â said Tsosie. âSydney and I are co-presidents of Native Americans at Dartmouth, and I think the fact that we have each other is so important, because everything that happens within a community is crucial when it comes to activism and organizing. That was a super powerful moment.â
Earlier in the day, Abrams spent time with students and also with Senior Vice President and Senior Diversity Officer , who moderated the keynote talk.
âOn a personal note, she is a person of deep conviction,â Delalue told the Hanover Inn audience. âJust two minutes into conversations with her, you feel that her work is coming from a place of heart, her parents, her ancestors, and all those before her who have lit the way for her leadership. And Iâm a better person tonight for it.â
Dartmouthâs Martin Luther King Jr. on Jan. 23 with a multi-faith celebration in Rollins Chapel, and will also include a Jan. 29 conversation on equity in higher education with Anthony Abraham Jack, inaugural faculty director of the Boston University Newbury Center, in Filene Auditorium.


