Normal 0 MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Rep. Charles Rangel I enter Congressman Charles Rangel's suite of offices, housed on the 7th floor of the Harlem state office building named after the late, legendary politician Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. The 12-foot stainless steel statue of Powell's likeness--complete with the defiant, purposeful stride--can be found on the plaza below, linking America's premiere Black Hamlet's past with its present. Inside the office is a buzz of activity as aides field calls, make appointments, and handle the concerns of an occasional walk-in constituent--one being an elderly man who wants to know about his housing status in between interludes of Nat King Cole tunes. Rangel, who unseated Powell in 1970, has spent the past four decades dealing with eight presidential administrations, a battery of political challenges, countless partisan victories, and a scandal or two as this district's perennial representative. I am in the office to conduct my first on-camera interview for our Black Enterprise Business Report television show with the Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, one of the nation's most powerful legislators. The interview focuses on—what else?—President Obama's massive, unprecedented economic agenda. The meeting falls on the day after U.S. Navy snipers rescued a lifeboat captain from Somali pirates—making Obama reportedly the first commander-in-chief who has had to deal with pirates since Thomas Jefferson—and the day in which the president announced that his administration has approved the two-thousandth local infrastructure project since the signing of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act more than six weeks ago. As our field producer Kenneth Meeks, a student of politics in his own right, finishes handling the logistics, I meet the raspy-voiced powerbroker—the second time I've had a chance to conduct a face-to-face Q&A session since he gained control of Ways and Means two years ago. As we shake hands, Rangel flashes his smile, beaming over the new political era he never fathomed he'd participate in. Of course, he relishes it even more that Democrats control the White House and two houses of Congress. Last year, when he went along with the $700 billion bailout plan, now known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), Rangel admits "he was scared to death like everyone else." But the measure, he asserts, was necessary to provide stability to a fragile financial system. He supported the administration's mammoth $787 billion stimulus package that was to help "stop the pain†through, among other items, unemployment relief and preservation of public sector jobs. But he was most excited on April 2, when he voted along with his Democratic colleagues for the $3.55 trillion budget package that closely followed Obama's "blueprint for America,†a plan calling for the overhaul of the infrastructure and instruction within America's schools, reformation of the costly octopus of a healthcare system, and initiation of the green economy over the next decade. He likens it to being a part of FDR's new deal. "Every generation has to go through something like this†he gushed at the beginning of the interview. "It's righting the course of America.†My response: "Well, Rahm Emanuel [Obama's Chief of Staff] has been quoted as saying, ‘You shouldn't let a crisis go to waste.' †"I wouldn't characterize the situation that way.†However, he did agree that the economic catastrophe was an opportunity to "remake America,†although he didn't sound convincing when I asked him just how the administration would cut the deficit in half by 2013 without raising taxes across the board. He finds much of the answer in significant GDP growth — the Obama administration estimates it will expand by 2.6% each year. Although transforming the economy will not be easy, Rangel has placed his faith in the administration's approach. For instance, when I asked how businesses that have lost their financial footing and now have severe credit problems will be able to qualify for funding under the revamped SBA 7(a) guaranteed loan program, he told me, "I don't know except to say that you're going to have extreme local, state, and federal regulations and support to know that it's not just the right thing to do but if [small business] goes under, they are encouraging, indirectly, the problem that we are trying to get out of ... But [the Obama administration is saying] something that I haven't heard in all of the years that I've been in government, that this is going to be to be a compassionate administration that is going to recognize that we don't want people to go under ... We don't want people to have to foreclose and sell their businesses … We don't just want to be a creditor that enforces the law. We want people to know that we want to work things out.†Rangel readily admits there "are going to be some losers but, in terms of a generation, I don't think there's been a more exciting and challenging time for American minorities.†"When the Roosevelt recovery came, that picked up everybody. Blacks were trained. Blacks were building. Blacks were providing art and music. And even after World War II, even though blacks were treated worse than German prisoners, that G.I. Bill picked us up and [enabled] us to go into business and have homes. I think that we're going through that period now when we're talking about billions of dollars out there for the green economy,†he recounts as he rattles off alternative fuel programs, solar energy projects, and biofuel initiatives. "What world are we talking about? It's not your world or mine. It's our kids' world.†From 125th Street, Rangel makes his connection from the challenging present to a glorious future.