91茄子

91茄子
John Olds poses with Massachusetts state representative Lenny Mirra
John Olds poses with Lenny Mirra, a Massachusetts state representative who won reelection last week. Olds was able to manage Mirra鈥檚 reelection campaign due to GW鈥檚 decision to hold virtual classes this fall in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. (Courtesy of John Olds)

Virtual classes give GW students chance to participate in local elections

Campus closures gave some GW students the opportunity to volunteer at the polls and with local political campaigns.

John Olds said he wouldn鈥檛 trade his senior year at George Washington University for anything. He studies political science and economics and he is slated to graduate this spring. But there is one silver lining to spending his last year in college online, he said.

At 21, he got to manage a political campaign.

After going home to Merrimac, Massachusetts, when GW initially closed its campus in March, Olds said he was scrambling to find work. He had an internship lined up, but that fell through. So, on a whim, he sent a message to his state representative, Lenny Mirra.

Olds accepted the position of campaign manager on Mirra鈥檚 reelection campaign in June. Six months later, he and Mirra celebrated a successful reelection bid.

Olds, a member of the GW College Republicans, said if he had been on campus this fall, he likely would have volunteered on a campaign, but he wouldn鈥檛 have been able to secure a management position.

Fellow GW College Republicans member Patrick Burland agrees. At 21, Burland also led a state legislature campaign for a candidate near Burland鈥檚 hometown of Woodbridge, Connecticut.

He said he scheduled campaign meetings around his class schedule, something that would make those he was working with chuckle. That said, the flexibility of online classes and GW鈥檚 decision to cancel classes on Election Day gave Burland more time to focus on his campaign work.

鈥淚t was extremely personally beneficial,鈥 Burland said. 鈥淥bviously I developed more relationships in the area and I got a really hands-on experience at a really interesting time.鈥

Although Burland鈥檚 candidate, Mike Southworth, didn鈥檛 win his bid to represent Connecticut鈥檚 14th District in the state senate, he said the experience was extremely beneficial and likely one he wouldn鈥檛 have gotten if he had been on campus this fall.

鈥淚f I was at school for GW I would have probably been helping out with some of the campaigns in Virginia or in Maryland,鈥 Burland said.

Patrick Burland holds campaign post cards
Patrick Burland poses with pamphlets for Mike Southworth, a candidate for the Connecticut State Senate, whose campaign Burland managed. Although Southworth lost his bid, Burland said he would not have had the opportunity to manage a campaign had he been in D.C. during the election cycle. (Courtesy of Patrick Burland)

A younger campaign

According to , three times as many young people volunteered for a political campaign during the 2020 election cycle than the 2018 midterm election.

The survey lists a range of reasons for that uptick 鈥 increased activity around social issues and the presidential race chief among them 鈥 but for students like Olds and Burland, geography was a primary contributor.

As for two other GW students, Cordelia Scales and Melanie Campbell, their proximity to their home districts this semester allowed them to volunteer at local poll stations.

Campbell, a Pittsburg resident, worked at a poll station around the corner from the grocery store where she works. She helped sign in her coworkers to vote and worked with another student who was also home due to campus closures.

鈥淚鈥檓 really happy I got to do it,鈥 Campbell said. 鈥淚 would definitely do it again if I had the chance.鈥

Scales counted absentee ballots and registered voters in her hometown of Brookline, New Hampshire. She said she helped register over 250 voters and counted nearly 900 absentee ballots.

After a decrease in election workers during the primary elections in the spring caused fewer numbers of polling locations and longer lines, local and national leaders put out a call for a younger cadre of election volunteers. And, for the most part, young people responded.

鈥淚 know in my town most of the polls workers are aged 65 and up so they are at a significantly higher risk for the virus,鈥 Scales said. 鈥淭here is no early voting in New Hampshire, so it鈥檚 always lots of people. So, I wanted to keep them safe.鈥

A local perspective

Working on a local campaign during a divisive election wasn鈥檛 always easy, nor was volunteering to work at polling locations during a pandemic.

Campbell said she was nervous voters wouldn鈥檛 respect the regulations local election officials had adopted. Meanwhile, Burland said he had to have sometimes tough conversations with voters who were also his friends and neighbors.

But both said that鈥檚 what made the experience important.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e more invested in it because you can kind of measure the impact that things you do have on your community,鈥 Burland said.

Many also noted how different their communities are than the environment they would have been exposed to in D.C.

鈥淚t was a different atmosphere in D.C.,鈥 Campbell said. 鈥淧ennsylvania was obviously super polarized and divided.鈥
Olds said one of the primary benefits of the experience was getting to see the election from outside what he called the hyper-engaged D.C. bubble.

鈥淒.C. is very unrepresentative of the rest of the country,鈥 Olds said. 鈥淎nd learning to be a political scientist when living in the D.C. bubble can lead to drawing wrong conclusions about what Americans are actually thinking.鈥

Going forward, all four students said they would like to stay engaged with politics, both local and national. Scales and Campbell are both members of GW鈥檚 College Democrats. Campbell leads the organization鈥檚 progressive caucus.

As for Olds and Burland, they hope their sometimes differing perspectives, especially on race and climate change, are heard by older members of their party.

鈥淲e were the ones sometimes who stepped up, working the polls to make sure that elections worked smoothly,鈥 Burland said. 鈥淲e were the ones on the ground 鈥 and we have concerns that not all Republicans share.鈥

Anna Brugmann

Anna covers Bloomingdale, Eckington and surrounding areas for thewash.org. She's interested in education and health access. Before coming to the Wash, Anna covered nonprofits, county government and school programs in Sarasota, Florida. She is a returned Peace Corps volunteer and a Missouri native.

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