11-05-12

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The Corne¬ Daily Sun E G LECTION

UIDE

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012

Four Years Later,Obama Euphoria Fades By KERRY CLOSE Sun News Editor

As the contentious and divisive 2012 presidential campaign draws to a close, Cornell students and professors say that this year’s election has not generated nearly the same level of excitement on campus as the one in 2008. During the 2008 campaign, Cornell’s campus was “abuzz,” said Prof. Theodore Lowi,

government. “There was a lot of talk, a lot of chatter, among both faculty and students, on the issues,” he said. But this year, Lowi said, he has seen far less enthusiasm about the upcoming presidential election. “Walking around campus, I’ve seen no excitement, nothing energizing. I see it as a typical fall term. I don’t see that students are eager to get involved in spats with each other or talk about what has happened lately in politics,” he said. Prof. Isaac Kramnick, government, said campus interest in the 2008 presidential race was in large part due to the state of the economy. “The election in 2008 occurred with the economy in absolute shambles,” he said. “Students were just as worried and concerned as their parents were about the possibility … of revisiting the Great Depression.” Still, citing the number of issues at stake in the 2012 election, Kramnick said he was surprised by the “general lack of enthusiasm” among students. Kramnick said that the 2012 election also differs from the 2008 election because President Obama faced a particularly challenging campaign for re-election. He quoted former HAILEY WILMER / SUN FILE PHOTO

Obama-mania | Cornell

y t n o e n w e T toOne

In Cornell government department, Dems outnumber GOP by huge margin By REBECCA HARRIS Sun News Editor

The Democratic affiliation of an overwhelming number of Cornell’s government professors is neither evidence of bias nor inherently disadvantageous to students, according to the department’s chair. After all, he says, Cornell’s government professors are academics who study politics from a primarily theoretical standpoint. “We’re professional political scientists, so we study political science as an empirical science,” department chair Prof. Nicholas van der Walle, government, said. “We’re trying to render a more scientific study of politics, so we all have a kind of distance that means we don’t have very engaged conversations about politics. Maybe that’s curious, but that’s true.” Of those registered to vote in Tompkins County, only one Cornell government professor is registered as a Republican, compared to 21 Democrats, according to the Tompkins County Board of Elections. But that disparity is not a problem, according to van der

Walle. “I don’t feel like [Cornell’s government professors are] particularly engaged in the election. I think we could be criticized for not being engaged in civil exercise rather than for being overly engaged in it in a partisan way,” van der Walle said. “I would suspect you have much more overt political conversations in the math department than in the government department.” But Raj Kannappan ’13, a government major and former chair of the Cornell Republicans, said the liberal slant of the department’s faculty is clear. It is obvious, he said, that the majority of professors in the department lean to the left of the political spectrum — and he can usually tell “right off the bat” within the first few days of a course where the professor stands on most issues, whether or not the professor intended to disclose their politics to the class. “Obviously, I don’t expect them to be robots — they have their own views and that’s completely fine. Sometimes I almost wish they’d See GOVERNMENT page E3

students take to Dino’s to celebrate President Barack Obama winning the 2008 election. If Obama wins, will they this year?

THE SUN’S GUIDE TO TOMORROW’S VOTE Coverage of:

• Campaign $$$ • Alumni candidates • Polls

New York Governor Mario Cuomo, who in 1985 wrote: “You campaign in poetry. You govern in prose.” “I think the real issue with Obama is that four years ago, he was campaigning in poetry — the poetry of hope, change and the drama of an African American running for president,” Kramnick said. “This time around, he is running in prose, because he has been governing for four years and no one sounds as exciting, as thrilling, after they had their hands tarnished by having to govern.” Max Schechter ’14, chair of public relations for the Cornell Democrats, agreed that Obama’s campaign has lost much of the novelty that made him so appealing in 2008. “It’s the difference between an ideal presidency and a reality,” he said. Still, Schechter said Obama’s record as an incumbent could also work in his favor. “I think we have more concrete things to be happy about, like the repeal of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ and the saving of the auto industry,” Schechter said. “The difference [in this election] is that we’ve gotten to see [Obama’s] ideas put into practice.” Jess Reif ’14, chair of the Cornell Republicans, countered that it is Obama’s performance during his first term — not the fact that he is running for re-election — that explains why Cornellians are not as excited about this election as they were in 2008. “I think in his 2008 campaign, [Obama] seemed like a bold leader,” she said. “In the last four years, he has proven that he’s incompetent.” Reif said that she expects this lack of enthusiasm to be reflected in a decrease in youth voter turnout this season. See ENTHUSIASM page E3

Rep.Hinchey Leaves Liberal Legacy After Decades of Public Service By AKANE OTANI Sun News Editor

Outgoing Rep. Maurice Hinchey’s (D-N.Y.) 38-year career in politics had a humble beginning: collecting tolls on the New York Thruway at night to pay his way through college. The Manhattan native, who served in the U.S. Navy and worked in a cement factory before attending college, said he was steered toward politics by a “natural calling” to help others. “I had a strong desire to make life better for people in my community, my state and my country,” Hinchey said. Hinchey got his chance in 1975, when he w a s elected to the N e w Yo r k State

Assembly — becoming the first Democrat from Ulster County to win a seat in the legislature since 1912. After being elected to represent the former 22nd Congressional District, which includes Ithaca and Binghamton, Hinchey established himself as a staunch supporter of federal student aid programs and research funding. Visiting Cornell in 2011, Hinchey decried a G.O.P. proposal to cut Pell Grant funding, calling it a “huge, huge mistake.” H e

also slammed a proposal in the House of Representative to slash federal investments in research, saying that Cornell, along with other universities, used government funds to advance medicine, clean energy and agricultural technologies. These fights to preserve federal resources, he recalled, remain “some of the greatest victories” of his political career. “From money for research projects at Cornell to expanded student aid, I’ve always focused on making strategic investments that will help ensure a brighter future for individuals and our communities,” he said. As a member of several committees in the House of Representatives, Hinchey continued to push progressive agendas — voting against a proposed ban to prohibit gay couples from adopting children in D.C., advocating replacing the death penalty with life imprisonment and pushing the Environmental Protection Agency to study the environmental effects of hydraulic fracturing. See HINCHEY page E3


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11-05-12 by The Cornell Daily Sun - Issuu