Right to Start plans GOP debate on entrepreneurship; If America is going to be saved, Heartland innovators will be key, says leader

July 25, 2023  |  Matthew Gwin

Victor Hwang, Right to Start

A nonprofit founded by a former Kauffman Foundation executive is planning a first-of-its-kind forum on entrepreneurship with four Republican presidential candidates this Friday in the Midwest.

Right to Start is a nonpartisan organization that champions entrepreneurship as a civic priority through grassroots organizing and policy advocacy, with the goal of expanding entrepreneurial opportunity.

Friday’s forum in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, is expected to provide a platform for adding substance to the national discourse around entrepreneurship, said Victor Hwang, founder and CEO of Right to Start.

“It’s kind of this missing part of our public debate, so we wanted to elevate that and bring this issue to the forefront,” Hwang said.

Click here to read more coverage of Right to Start’s advocacy work.

“Young businesses are the source of almost all net job growth in the economy,” Hwang added. “They help raise incomes; they help fight inequality; they help lift people out of poverty. Entrepreneurs are the source of so many positive things in society, but it’s hardly ever talked about at the national level, and there hasn’t really been a lot of substance in the discourse.”

The presidential campaign is a key time to draw attention to the cause, Hwang noted, adding that Right to Start will look for opportunities to engage with other candidates during the 2024 election cycle.

The four candidates participating in this week’s forum include Larry Elder, conservative talk show host; Asa Hutchinson, former governor of Arkansas; Perry Johnson, author; and Francis Suarez, mayor of Miami; all of whom have entrepreneurial experience.

The event runs from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Friday and will feature an audience of 200 people, including entrepreneurs from Iowa, Missouri, and surrounding states.

Registration for the free event is available here. To watch a livestream, visit the Right to Start Facebook page.

Widening the conversation

Since Hwang founded Right to Start in 2020, the organization has expanded rapidly, now actively working in 28 states.

Thirteen state legislatures introduced Right to Start bills this year, according to Hwang, with Nevada passing a bill to create an office of entrepreneurship in the state.

The Missouri state legislature in 2021 was the first to introduce the Right to Start Act, which ultimately could not be reconciled after different versions of the bill passed the state house and senate, Hwang said.

Right to Start has also introduced legislation in Kansas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas, he added.

In all of the organization’s policy advocacy, Right to Start aims to shift thinking to show how so many aspects of public policy impact entrepreneurship, Hwang said.

“Entrepreneurship has usually been talked about in really narrow terms in political debate in the past, so we wanted to really expand the discussion,” he said. “Entrepreneurs are not just affected by what the SBA does. They’re affected by issues around economic development, workforce training, government contracting, health care, education, and capital access.”

Because of that, Right to Start pushes for broad policy initiatives that will lift up young businesses and “level the playing field,” Hwang said.

“The bills that we’ve been recommending to policymakers have really looked across the board,” he said. “The bill that just passed in Nevada . . . kind of changes the way that the system functions.”

“How do you expand government contracts?” Hwang continued. “How do you open up workforce training? How do you create more ways to access capital for entrepreneurs that are starting out? It really is meant to look very widely at all the different parts of the policymaking ecosystem as they affect entrepreneurs.”

Victor Hwang, Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, 2019 State of Entrepreneurship address

Victor Hwang, Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, 2019 State of Entrepreneurship address; Startland News photo by Tommy Felts

‘In the American DNA’

Hwang’s expansive view of entrepreneurial policy can be traced to his time with the Kauffman Foundation, where he served as vice president of entrepreneurship from 2016 to 2019.

In that role, Hwang helped create “America’s New Business Plan,” which he described as a national agenda that expanded what is considered entrepreneurship policy.

However, Hwang said, he realized that a grassroots infrastructure was still missing, and would be necessary to move that work forward.

“Policymaking doesn’t just happen in a vacuum,” he said. “You’ve got to have boots on the ground. You’ve got to have people engaging with policymakers at the local, state, and federal levels, one-on-one.”

Right to Start provides that infrastructure to fight for entrepreneurs, Hwang said, comparing the organization’s work to how the ACLU fights to protect civil liberties.

“If you believe that everyone should have a basic right to have a level playing field to build, start, and grow their own business, then there should be an infrastructure voice that’s fighting for you,” he said. “That’s what Right to Start is. It’s a voice to lift up the needs, the concerns, and the issues of entrepreneurs from the grassroots to the grasstops.”

That message has resonated widely, Hwang added, pointing to a Right to Start nationwide poll that found almost universal support — more than 90 percent — for the importance of fair opportunity to start a business.

“We actually think of America as a nation of silent strivers,” he said. “Americans actually care about entrepreneurship a lot. They care about issues affecting entrepreneurs a lot, but they haven’t articulated it, and our leaders haven’t helped them articulate it.”

“Entrepreneurship is in the American DNA,” Hwang added. “It’s time to express that through our political voice, and to have our leaders understand that and act on it.”

Corianne Rice, Center for City Solutions at the National League of Cities, speaks with Nia Richards, KC BizCare, during the November 2022 grand opening of KC BizCare’s new offices at City Hall; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

KC entrepreneurship as a model

Although Hwang founded Right to Start in order to push for improved entrepreneurial policy, he said Kansas City could offer a blueprint to the rest of the country.

“I talk about what’s happened in Kansas City a lot nationally as a model,” Hwang said, highlighting the work of KC BizCare in particular. “That’s very rare in the country, and a really special case, and a role model for the rest of the country.”

Hwang also praised the work being done in Kansas City to level the access gap between different parts of the city, specifically those people and neighborhoods who have historically been excluded and disenfranchised.

Beyond building on that work, Kansas Citians need to brag more, Hwang said.

“I think Kansas City should be prouder and louder about the work that’s happening,” he said. “Kansas Citians are often a bit humble, and don’t talk about this stuff as much as they should. … I think there’s a lot worth bragging about in Kansas City.”

After moving to Kansas City, Hwang said he witnessed how entrepreneurs remained focused on solving problems, which he said will always be key to the nation’s progress.

“One of the great joys I had in Kansas City was seeing how people are still hard at work, righting the wrongs, filling the gaps, and making things happen,” he said. “I think if this country is going to be saved, the Heartland is going to play a big part in it.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2023 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Digital divide initiative could help 9,000 Kansas City households

        By Tommy Felts | July 20, 2016

        More than 9,000 Kansas City households are among the potential beneficiaries of a new national digital divide initiative. Comcast recently partnered with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s ConnectHome initiative, marking the largest expansion to Comcast’s Internet Essentials program. Now all Kansas City households within a Comcast service area that receive HUD housing…

        New Startland reporter wants to immerse herself in KC’s culture of innovation

        By Tommy Felts | July 19, 2016

        Two months ago today, I packed up the last of my belongings in my Columbia, Mo. apartment. And to be frank, I was slightly embarrassed to be moving back in with my parents in Independence, Mo. A recent graduate from the University of Missouri’s School of Journalism, it seemed that almost everybody I knew was…

        Exclusive: John Fein departing Techstars to lead new $7M Midwest venture fund

        By Tommy Felts | July 19, 2016

        After three years with the Kansas City-based Sprint Accelerator, John Fein is moving on to lead a venture fund that has ambitious Midwestern plans. Fein, who’s served as the managing director at the Techstars-led accelerator since 2014, will serve his last day with the organization on July 31. With decades of fast-paced startup experience, Fein…

        cash money

        Mid-America Angels set for second consecutive record-breaking year

        By Tommy Felts | July 18, 2016

        The Mid-America Angels is poised to make 2016 a record-breaking year. The area investment group already has deployed $1.7 million via seven deals in the first six months of 2016, setting pace for its biggest year of investment in its ten-year history. In 2015, the firm set a record for its amount of capital deployed,…