Next up: Opportunities in New Hampshire Presidential Primaries
11/01/2018
By Katharine Webster
Working for the underdog 鈥 a Republican candidate in a Democratic-leaning district 鈥 has its advantages.
Just ask Justin St. Louis, a junior political science major in the Honors College. In 2016, he was knocking on doors and phone-banking in New Hampshire as a field representative for then-Sen. Kelly Ayotte. Now he鈥檚 deputy political director for Rick Green, the Republican running for Congress in Massachusetts鈥 3rd District.
St. Louis is helping to plan events and constituent meetings, creating all of the campaign鈥檚 graphics and crafting much of its email and social media messaging, all while learning about fundraising. If he were working for an incumbent with an existing political organization, he wouldn鈥檛 have gotten such an opportunity, he says.
鈥淚鈥檝e gotten to see the whole campaign from start to finish,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like being on the ground floor with a startup that grows into a significant company.鈥
Students are talking to voters, working on social media outreach and serving as debate panelists. One or two are even running for office themselves. And they鈥檙e connecting their classroom learning to their experiences in the field every day.
鈥淚鈥檝e been able to take what I鈥檝e learned in the campaigns and relate it back to what I learn in the classroom,鈥 says Curtis Boucher, president of the UML College Republicans. 鈥淭he media stuff, public opinion 鈥 I鈥檇 learn it in class in the morning, and in the afternoon I鈥檇 live it.鈥
鈥淪eeing campaigns up front gives students a chance to apply the research we show them in the classroom, but also think about the limits of that research,鈥 says Assoc. Prof. John Cluverius, associate director of UML's Center for Public Opinion. 鈥淪ome students will even apply their campaign experiences to new research projects, based on what they鈥檝e observed.鈥
For members of the UML College Democrats, the contest for the 3rd Congressional District seat being vacated by U.S. Rep. Niki Tsongas offered tons of internships 鈥 and plenty of friendly rivalry, since 10 Democrats were on the primary ballot.聽
Several women in the club campaigned for Lori Trahan, now the nominee. Other members campaigned for Rufus Gifford and Juana Matias before the Sept. 4 primary.
鈥淚 learned how the political machine works, how fundraising money flows and how to convince voters,鈥 he says.
Madhav Sampath, a junior majoring in economics, interned during the primary for Gifford, the former ambassador to Denmark and finance director for President Obama鈥檚 2012 re-election campaign. Now he鈥檚 interning for the state Democratic Party in support of Trahan, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren and candidates in state races.
鈥淎fter nine months of campaigning for Rufus and other Democrats, I realized this is what I want to do for the rest of my life,鈥 he says.
Hannah Casey, a sophomore double-majoring in history and political science, signed up to work for Gifford over the summer after he came and spoke to one of her classes. She knocked on 2,000 doors and made 2,000 phone calls to voters on Gifford鈥檚 behalf. She loves making that personal connection.
鈥淐onversations are the most critically important thing we can do,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou need to be able to talk to people with completely different points of view, listen to them and understand where they鈥檙e coming from.鈥
Andrew Sciascia also 鈥渓oves the doors.鈥 A junior majoring in political science and criminal justice, he鈥檚 interning for MassVictory, the Republicans鈥 coordinated campaign. He enjoys listening to people鈥檚 stories 鈥 and practicing his powers of persuasion.聽
Sciascia and UML College Dems President Julie Lawton also got to quiz candidates in the 3rd Congressional and 1st Middlesex Districts during debates co-hosted by the university and The Lowell Sun.聽
Alex Leighton Williams, a 21-year-old Amesbury resident who鈥檚 in the History Department鈥檚 five-year bachelor鈥檚-to-master鈥檚 program, is the Republican candidate for state Senate in the 1st Essex District.聽
He鈥檚 running as a social liberal, a civic reformer and a fiscal hawk, trying to bring attention to issues that affect young people. He supports treatment instead of jail for people addicted to opioids, and he鈥檚 a strong advocate for public higher education. He says his professors are as good as those at private colleges. The same goes for his friends in UML鈥檚 engineering and business programs, who are helping him knock on voters鈥 doors from Methuen to Salisbury Beach.
鈥淚f UMass can offer the best plastics engineering program in North America at one-fourth the cost of a private university, why does college cost so much?鈥 Williams asks. 鈥淚鈥檓 really proud of UMass.鈥
Boucher, who鈥檚 out knocking on doors with MacDonald whenever he鈥檚 not in class, is another 51视频 fan. He says his political science professors are always pushing him to learn more, both inside and outside the classroom, from doing campaign work to volunteering at SayDaNar, a nonprofit that aids Burmese refugees.
鈥淭his university has opened so many doors that I鈥檝e never dreamed of being opened,鈥 Boucher says. 鈥淭his university has put an emphasis on making sure we get out there and learn hands-on, in the field, so it鈥檚 not total culture shock when we leave the classroom 鈥 that we actually know what we鈥檙e doing out there.鈥