
Andrea Lloreda
Andrea Lloreda is a Colombian attorney and public-policy professional affiliated with the Congress of Colombia. She has worked as a staff attorney at Colombia’s Special Jurisdiction for Peace and was named a 2026 Aspen Ideas Festival Fellow.
Fourth of July Speeches Cast the Declaration as an Unfinished Obligation
Bryan Doerries’s Aspen closing session used Fourth of July speeches by Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln and the women’s-rights leaders of 1876 to argue that America’s founding language remains an obligation rather than a settled inheritance. Framed through Theater of War’s town-hall model, the session treated the Declaration of Independence as promise, evidence and indictment: a vocabulary repeatedly invoked by people excluded from its protections to demand that the republic enforce the principles it celebrates.
A 10-Year Civic Campaign Aims to Turn Local Trust Into Action
At the Aspen Ideas Festival, Heather Gerken, Brian Hooks, Jane Wales and other civic and philanthropic leaders cast Be the People as a decade-long effort to counter civic isolation by reconnecting Americans with local problem-solving. Their argument is that Americans retain more trust, generosity and desire to contribute than national political narratives suggest, but need institutions, cultural messengers and community organizations that make that shared agency visible and usable.