Oklahoma Magazine December 2018

Page 30

The State

POLITICS

‘How to Govern in a Diverse Society’

As OKC’s youngest chief executive since 1923, Mayor David Holt is changing the city’s leadership dynamic.

T

he country’s youngest mayor in a city with more than 500,000 people promotes diversity as the key to socioeconomic prosperity. He’s not a liberal from California. He’s not a Democrat from New York. He’s Oklahoma City-born-and-bred David Holt, whose term as head of municipal government enters its eighth month in December. “Quite frankly, we’ve been led by white males from northwest Oklahoma City for a long time,” says Holt, a 39-year-old who served two terms in the state Senate as a conservative Republican. “We need to break down walls and get out of our bubbles. Everybody needs to be at the leadership table.” Holt says he delights in OKC’s nonpartisan election policies “because I would not have been elected if I had been a firebrand ideologue. I got endorsements from Democrats and Republicans alike.” Holt won with 78.5 percent of the vote, the highest victory for a non-incumbent in OKC mayoral history. As the youngest mayor since 1923, he replaced 14-year veteran Mick Cornett, for whom Holt was chief of staff from 2006 to 2011. The son of a teacher and a social worker says embracing diversity comes not necessarily from his parents, but his own experiences. “In Washington, I was often the only person of my race on the subway, which is unusual for many white men,” he says. “I’ve lived in places where I’m the only white male. I lived for seven years in the District of Columbia, which has long been a minority-majority city.

28

OKLAHOMA MAGAZINE | DECEMBER 2018

AS OKC’S YOUNGEST CHIEF EXECUTIVE SINCE 1923, MAYOR DAVID HOLT IS CHANGING THE CITY’S LEADERSHIP DYNAMIC. PHOTO BY BRENT FUCHS

“It’s also the virtue of being younger. My Senate district [in northwest OKC] was already transitioning to what the rest of the city looks like by the time I left. In Oklahoma City as a whole, 60 percent of those under 18 years old are non-white. Because Oklahoma City is still largely segregated racially and economically, I felt as mayor that this is an issue I could get out ahead of.” Two steps – one symbolic, one strategic – illustrate Holt changing OKC’s leadership dynamic. In his office, he removed (and placed in another room) the photographs of previous mayors, all white men. He replaced them with portraits of 20 OKC children from all walks of life. “When I talk of diversity, I mean everything – racial, gender, age, geographic,” says Holt, the first member of the Osage tribe to become OKC mayor. In October, Holt rolled out the first of many appeals to OKC residents about what

to do after the Metropolitan Area Projects Plan 3 (known by locals as MAPS 3) is completed in 2020. He wants to know if they want to extend a penny sales tax for a fourth time and, if they do, what they want to improve next. “I want to keep an open mind and have people offer their ideas,” Holt says. “I know people want to see more of the projects spread around the city and address social issues. We want to see what everyone has to say. “I have tried to prove that there’s room in American politics for consensus. In Oklahoma City, our success in the past 20 years has been to set aside what divides us. We need to double down on what unites us. “I’m trying to set an example for the world on how to govern in a diverse society.” BRIAN WILSON

ONLINE EXTRA FOR AN ADDITIONAL ARTICLE ABOUT DAVID HOLT, GO TO OKMAG.COM.


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Articles inside

Steve Whitaker

2min
page 114

What's Fresh This Month

1min
page 103

The Overeating Trap

1min
page 103

Paseo's On a Roll

1min
page 103

Putting It All into the Bin

2min
page 102

Arduini's – Cooking the Sicilian Way

1min
page 100

Embrace the Bear

2min
pages 99-100

People with Style

6min
pages 94-97

Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous

8min
pages 90-93

The State of Religion

9min
pages 80-85

2018 Great Companies to Work For

46min
pages 53, 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68-72, 74, 76, 78-79

That Family Feeling

3min
pages 54-55

Beware Brittle Bones

2min
page 44

Yo, Hadrian – This Wall's Not Rocky

2min
page 42

Updated Vintage

4min
pages 38-40

Creating Cookie Traditions

1min
page 37

A Band Roped into Success

5min
pages 32, 34

'How to Govern in a Diverse Society'

2min
page 30

Not Just for Kids

2min
page 28

A Fine Shade of Green

2min
page 26

Traveling Green

4min
pages 24-25

Liberal Teachings in a Red State

2min
page 22

Don't Mock the Brothers

2min
page 20

Vanning Out in New Directions

2min
page 16

Unique Vintage

5min
pages 86-88

Throwing Her Voice Around

3min
pages 18-19

Out on a Limb

3min
pages 13-14
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