Monday, March 31, 2008

Marquette University: Sustainable Development and Our Environment

On March 4th, Democracy Matters at Marquette University hosted a panel discussion
entitled “Sustainable Development and Our Environment”.

There has been a growing concern among students on Marquette’s campus about the
University’s commitment to environmental stewardship. The news of Marquette’s plans
to build a new law school building, engineering building, and administration
building has given a platform for concerned students to engage the administration
with these concerns.

Democracy Matters, in coalition with the Les Aspin Center for Government Alumni
Council and Students for an Environmentally Active Campus, was able to successfully
provide a venue for this discussion with the March 4th event. Panelists included Dr.
Michael Switzenbaum, Professor and Executive Associate Dean of the College of
Engineering, Ms. Laura Bray, Executive Director of Menomonee Valley Partners Inc.,
and Mr. Tom Ganey, Director of the Office of the Marquette University Architect.

Democracy Matter’s campus coordinator was the moderator of the panel discussion, and
gave a brief introduction to the event. He talked about the Democracy Matters
Organization and quickly explained how money and politics is related to the issue of
sustainable development. He then introduced the panelists and moderated the Q & A
session that followed the panelist’s presentations.

The event was a great success, with nearly 100 students in attendance. Students had
the chance to voice their concerns for an environmentally sound campus, and hear the
University’s plans to that end. Although the event was not centered around the issue
of money and politics, it did give recognition to Democracy Matters on campus and
raise awareness of the issue of campaign finance reform. Students picked up
literature on the relationship between election finance and the environmental
movement, and have since contacted the Democracy Matters Campus Coordinator in large
numbers.

Student activists can learn from the indirect approach taken by Democracy Matters at
Marquette. As most Democracy Matters activists know, it can be difficult to attract
students to the issue of campaign finance by itself. By pairing the issues of
Democracy Matters with the issues that resonate on campus, a large audience can be
made aware of the influence of money in politics.

Benedictine University Coal Ben Debate



Democracy Matters Presents: The Coal Ben’s Presidential Debate

Democracy Matters sponsored Benedictine University’s Presidential Debate. The debate focused on four major issues in this upcoming Presidential election, the war in Iraq, health care, education, and the candidates tax plan. The candidates were portrayed by students, with the Republicans and Democrats having one representative for each issue. Because of the split in the Democratic Party, Senator Clinton and Senator Obama’s split the topics. Student’s debated the issues using their normative values and the specific stances of their candidates, which provided quite the entertainment for the audience. Between 50-60 students, faculty, and staff came to experience the debate’s energy and information. Each section of the debate focused on the issue of money and its influence on that particular topic.

The debate concluded with a discussion on private money interest in politics, and how each of the four issues are directly effected by special interest group’s torrential influence of representatives at all levels of government. Planning an event around the exciting Presidential Election is a great cover for getting the message of Democracy Matters to the public. People are energized and passionate about the outcome of this election and are eager to support their candidates, having this type of crowd a coordinator can find new recruits. The debate sparked interest in both the 2008 Presidential Election and the Benedictine University chapter of Democracy Matters. Following the debate four members of the audience spoke with me about informational meetings for Democracy Matters. The Debate was an ENORMOUS success!!!

Kyle T. Schulz (Campus Coordinator Democracy Matters-Benedictine University)

Monday, March 17, 2008

Mock Presidential Debate - Ohio State University, OH

In the final days leading up to Ohio State's finals week and also Ohio's much-contested Primary, Democracy Matters helped to organize the University's Mock Presidential Forum.

Essentially, teams of two or three students representing each of the remaining candidates were tasked to research their candidate's positions and platform and then participate in a moderated Q & A, with questions coming first from a list of around 20 questions compiled by the moderators and then a round of questions from the audience.

Because of Democracy Matters' involvement at nearly every stage of the planning process, including writing a fair amount of the questions, campaign finance reform and clean elections were two of the hottest topics at the Forum.

More than just summarizing an event at our campus, this entry is being written also to try and give other Democracy Matters chapters an idea of how to pull off a successful campus event. We packed one of OSU's largest lecture halls (and with an undergrad population of 50,000+ that's no small feat) and got rave reviews from other student groups and especially from our campus press.

How did we do it? Here's a step-by-step breakdown of what our chapter did to pull off this event. Feel free to use it as a guide to ensuring your chapter becomes one of the dominant voices on campuses of all sizes.

1) If you haven't done so already, get registered with your college or University. At some schools, this will allow you greater access to resources like free flyer printing, access to buildings to reserve space for meetings or events, and maybe even money to help cover the costs of events. Being a registered student group also increases the sense of your legitimacy on campus, which is essential if you want to move to step two.

2) Get close with faculty in the Political Science and Sociology departments. This doesn't mean send them a random email about DM. Find out which professors are interested in or supporters of voter-owned elections and schedule a face-to-face meeting during their office hours. Invite a professor to your next DM meeting, and turn that meeting into a professor-recruitment opportunity: get as many students as you can out to the event, make it fun with free food and drink, and watch perhaps a series of televised discussions on voter-owned elections or a documentary on the subject. DM has a lot of resources for this, so ask your coordinator.

3) Start showing up to the "big" political activism clubs on your campus: usually these are the undergraduate club sponsored by the Polisci Department, Young Dems and Young Republicans, and the ACLU. If your members take an interest in them, these groups will probably return the favor. It's important to network with these big clubs first because the reality is that these groups are always holding events and always looking for new ways to publicize themselves. You should be one of those big clubs, and you can be.

So how does it all fit together, and how did we turn our event into a success?

First things first-set a date and secure a room on campus (easy to do if you've got step one down). Next, send out an event press kit (details like Time, Place, etc) and get the other groups on board (step 3). Our coalition for the Mock Presidential Forum included both College Dems and Pubs, the Undergrad PoliSci Club, and the Black Student Caucus.

Once you get the groups buzzing, talk to some of your faculty friends (step 2 in action here). Most groups have faculty advisers, and if your campus is anything like mine, most political clubs have advisers who are engaged to what is happening on campus. They are crucial connections if you are looking to get additional support from a sponsoring department.

Once we had the details of the event worked out, the rest is just like knocking dominoes: if you've set things up right, it'll flow perfectly right up to the event. After you have a room, co-sponsors, and a solid idea of how the Forum will proceed, then you start making ads and talking to the campus press. Talk it up on campus. If there are first year dorms, spend a lot of time there distributing literature. RAs are often tasked to provide programming outlets for their residents, and they will jump at the chance to get a gold star from their bosses by sending their residents to a political awareness event.

There's not much more to it-be sure to document any and all DM events with photos and film. These are great to put on a facebook group or chapter website, or to send to DM national. If you can get these three organizational goals down, your chapter will be able to pull off any event, provided that you plan far enough in advance and be sure to promote it well. Even if things don't go 100% according to plan, if enough people are there the sheer energy of your audience will pull your event through.

Good Luck,
Zach Germaniuk
Ohio State University

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Race, Gender, and Religion in Politics - University of San Diego, CA

Democracy Matters: USD co-allied with the University of San Diego's Women's Center as well as the United Front Multicultural Center to host an event entitled, "Election 2008:  Does Race, Gender, or Religion Matter?" which generated a dynamic conversation with approximately 30 students, faculty members, and campus officials.  As the dialogue spoke to the disproportionate number of women or persons of color in elected office, Democracy Matters proposed clean elections as an avenue for correcting this inequity.  Many members requested additional information after the discussion concluded, and once again, DM was able to show how the implementation of clean elections can resolve a number of inaccuracies that flood our current democracy.

Brittany Schweer
DM Campus Coordinator
University of San Diego