Opinion

Local focus key for College Dems

The old adage that “all politics is local” often rings hollow in election years, especially when multitudes of Americans have been persuaded by rhetoric, which borders on the ridiculous, that this election has more relevance to them than other ones. In fact, the presidential election, like all major contests on the national level, may have a profound impact on the lives of the anecdotal “Joe the plumber.” However, speculation is an inadequate substitute for action. With a recent shift in the agenda of the University of Wisconsin’s own College Republicans toward more local races, particularly the state Legislature, a national election whose conclusion is essentially foregone has taken a backseat to more pertinent local ones. And with such a local focus on their plate, Republicans in the state may yet have their golden opportunity to drag higher education to the guillotine.

The College Republicans aren’t pursuing an insidious agenda — the sincerity of their belief is not on trial — but it bears pointing out that the candidates they will inevitably support have made no secret of their distaste for higher education. Take Tammy Baldwin’s congressional opponent, Peter Theron. Theron claims federal aid for low-income students in fact impairs their ability to pay for college because it gives universities a blank check to raise tuition to their heart’s content, secure in the knowledge that the feds will pick up the tab. Then again, Theron doesn’t have an education section on his campaign website.

On the other end of the seemingly interminable spectrum are the College Democrats, smugly anticipating an election night that will, barring a cataclysm, yield them victory on the national level. It will be a victory worth watching. And yet the significance of a victory for Obama will be powerfully diluted by a local Republican Party that can still claim control of the state Assembly when the dust has settled. The nagging sense of fear that a Republican-controlled Assembly should provoke is not the result of the inherently evil premise of a school of thought that preaches small government but rather the degree to which the supposed practitioners of that school have strayed from such a message. Spending for the Department of Corrections in the state increased by 14.6 percent in 2007, and a slew of new prisons have been constructed to accommodate the flow of inmates. In the meantime, Republicans in the Legislature managed, despite their pretensions to non-interventionism in citizen affairs, to enact a ban on gay marriage in 2006.

It is true that Barack Obama has pledged a colossal tax credit for college-bound students who need it, which he claims will make the first $4,000 of tuition free. Unfortunately, the standard bearer of American liberalism has also promised other things, including helping to create five million new jobs with a paltry $150 billion investment in new sources of energy. He’s also going to provide universal health care. And expand the Earned Income Tax Credit. And naturally, Obama will not, under any circumstances, put up with crap from trigger-happy, nuclear-armed Pakistan.

As the list of initiatives with little or no feasibility winds on, the College Democrats, here and elsewhere, should engage in the cold, unpleasant game of numbers that is the essence of electoral politics. Barack Obama will win Wisconsin, and the triviality of whether his margin shatters our very conception of the state’s voting history or not is irrelevant. The College Democrats have a base that resembles the political machine of Chicago in numbers and motivation — with an iota more of idealism. The race to decide control of the State Assembly will by no means be as glamorous as wearing a pin with everybody’s favorite demagogue imposed upon it — but come Election Day, the trudge through the accumulated mud of local politics will pay far greater dividends.

Sam Clegg ([email protected]) is a sophomore majoring in economics.

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9 older comments

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The problem facing the Dems and the local races is that every race in the student wards are essentially non-competitive. Its also kinda hard to get people to do anything non-Obama related nowadays, let alone drive to Eau Claire to knock on doors.

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Sam,

Peter Theron is absolutely right when he says that schools will raise tuition when low-income students suddenly have a higher ability to pay.

Go to Wikipedia, check out the term ‘moral hazard,’ and come back to me later. I’ll let you know next time I’m teaching econ 101; obviously, you never took it as an econ major.

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Dude, don’t be so confident about Obama. Palin’s hot apparently, and people are a lot more racist when they’re alone behind a curtain with a marker than when they’re being asked by some dude on a phone. VOTE!

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“Theron claims federal aid for low-income students in fact impairs their ability to pay for college because it gives universities a blank check to raise tuition to their heart�s content, secure in the knowledge that the feds will pick up the tab.”

That’s because we’re a blue state. Sorry to bring that up again, but we’re one of the states that actually pays more in federal taxes than we get back in federal outlays. That’s also why the southern red states’ college tuition increases are smaller. I call for a blue state tax revolt-pay our federal taxes to our home states. Let the red states raise their own state and local taxes for once.

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“College Democrats have a base that resembles the political machine of Chicago in numbers and motivation � with an iota more of idealism.”

The problem is that base (I’m talking about the volunteers here), is almost solely motivated by the presidential race. You could get 50 people to knock on doors for Obama, but ask those same 50 to do it for a state Assembly race and maybe 10 will show.

You can say it’s the College Dems’ fault for not being able to transfer the excitement and volunteer base from the national ticket to lower races, but it’s harder than you think.

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Sam, thank you for once again calling to our attention the importance of both local and state politics. As you mentioned, even if Sen. Obama is elected president, the Democrats will need elected officials on all levels in order to accomplish our goals. For those wondering, the assembly seats representing the three districts in Madison in which students live are uncontested meaning that both the College Democrats and College Republicans are turning to lend our resources to neighboring assembly races instead of focusing on the assembly races here in Madison. Winning back three state assembly seats is perhaps the top priority for College Democratic organizations around the state. Just ask our colleagues down at UW Whitewater. This weekend and early next week the College Democrats here in Madison will be helping Democratic candidate Trish O’Neil with her race in the nearby 47th assembly district just outside the city of Madison to help ensure she wins one of these three important seats on the state assembly. Thanks again for reminding all students of the importance these state assembly races hold and how politics extends beyond the White House.

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College Dems are doing a lot for local races. As a proud member of the College Dems, I have phonebanked for Kelda Helen Roys and will be canvassing for Trish O’Neil, both local assembly candidates. College Dems put a tremendous amount of work into sending our great representative, Tammy Baldwin, back to D.C.

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The College Dems are actually doing a big push this weekend to canvass and lit drop for some hotly contested Assembly races, so I wouldn’t call that doing nothing for local politics

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1) Theron is right about education. (but really, if we’re talking about local politics, why did you bring up another race for a national office?)

2) The CRs being involved in local and state politics isn’t a new development, it’s in our mission statement. We’ve been helping local campaigns since as far back as I can remember. We are the Wisconsin College Republicans—not simply Students for McCain. We are doing work day in and day out for all of our candidates.

3) There is nothing to fear of a Republican controlled Wisconsin State Assembly. The whole purpose of branches of government is for them to be able to check one another. Without at least one arm of our state government having a non-Democrat majority, the Dems could push any agenda item they wished. Now, if that’s what happens, that’s what happens. But there are plenty of people in the so-called “blue state” of Wisconsin who would take issue with a no-check system. This is a democracy; not a “whatever-the-Dems-say-goes-ocracy”. Like it or not, we need balance. I wouldn’t want a governor, state assembly, and state senate all controlled by the Republicans, and I certainly wouldn’t want it from the Democrats. The rest of the state would be wise to follow in that line of thinking.

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