The Daily Northwestern – November 9, 2017

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The Daily Northwestern Thursday, November 9, 2017

DAILYNORTHWESTERN.COM

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One year later, NU reflects on Trump Students, faculty concerned with administration By ALLY MAUCH

daily senior staffer @allymauch

Oreste Visentini/The Daily Northwestern

Toni Preckwinkle, Cook County board president, speaks at a Wednesday breakfast. Preckwinkle and several other city officials discussed progress on county-wide goals as well as transportation.

Officials talk progress on goals

Community leaders discuss county-wide programs over breakfast By RYAN WANGMAN

daily senior staffer @ryanwangman

Cook County officials detailed the current state of various county-wide programs to

Evanston community leaders and offered suggestions for the expansion of local partnerships at a Wednesday breakfast. Toni Preckwinkle, Cook County Board president, spearheaded the Evanston Community Leadership Prayer Breakfast,

which featured presentations from various county departments about recent progress made on goals. The breakfast, held at the Faith Temple Church of God in Christ, 1932 Dewey Ave., was attended by about 100 residents and multiple local leaders,

including Mayor Steve Hagerty and former Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl, both school district superintendents and Alds. Robin Rue Simmons (5th), Peter Braithwaite (2nd) and Cicely Fleming (9th). » See PROGRESS, page 6

Weinberg junior Sammy Cuautle said he knew he was taking a risk by voting for President Donald Trump in the 2016 election, but hoped that other Republican politicians would be able to steer the party in the right direction. Reflecting on the past year, Cuautle, secretary of public relations for College Republicans, said his hope has not been fulfilled, calling Trump’s administration a “circus.” “We’ve barely managed to pass a budget and there have been no steps taken towards tax reform,” Cuautle said. “Health care reform was a huge disaster … our diplomacy situation has really deteriorated because we can’t coordinate between the State Department and the White House.” One year after Trump’s controversial election, students across the political spectrum voiced concerns with Trump’s leadership and noticed increased activism on campus, while some faculty said they appreciated the

University’s response to recent national policies. Cuautle said on campus, the election has led people from both political sides to become more vocal and politically involved. College Republicans president David Donnelly, who voted for Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson in the election, said the Trump administration has not “gotten a lot done” in the past year. The McCormick senior added that, aside from the first few days of shock after the presidential election, he does not think campus has changed “radically” because of Trump. He said, however, that it was a reminder of the importance of voting. Donnelly said in his four years at NU, it has become increasingly difficult to plan College Republican events due to security concerns and a “political fervor” he partly attributed to Trump’s election. He added that despite this difficulty, the NU community has been particularly tolerant of political differences. “I understand that I am definitely an ideological minority here and people are going to disagree with me, and that’s totally fine,” Donnelly said. “Everyone at Northwestern is respectful.” » See TRUMP, page 6

Law students show ASG Senate talks CARE training support for DACA Students propose code change for all ASG-funded organizations Petition calls on Congress to create legislative solution By ELIZABETH BYRNE

daily senior staffer @lizbyrne33

Pritzker School of Law students gathered Wednesday to unveil a petition in support of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. The petition, drafted by members of the Petitioners Organizing for DACA’s Effective Replacement, calls on Congress to create a “fair and efficient pathway” for “Dreamers” — undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S.

before the age of 16 — and grant them protection from deportation. President Donald Trump’s administration announced Sept. 5 that the DACA program would end by March 2018. Cindy Gerges, a co-founder of PODER, said the group intentionally presented the petition one year after Trump’s election because it wanted to make a statement. She said the event where it introduced the petition was short and last-minute, but showed her classmates’ support for the cause. PODER debuted the petition to students in the Rubloff Atrium on NU’s Chicago campus. At the event, students and faculty — including a student who is a

By SAMANTHA HANDLER

the daily northwestern @sn_handler

To address student concerns about sexual assault and misconduct, Associated Student Government Senate proposed a code change Wednesday to mandate sexual assault, misconduct and harassment training for ASG-funded student groups. ASG President Nehaarika Mulukutla and Chief of Staff Lars Benson presented the Student Group CARE Training Mandate, which requires two leaders from each ASGfunded group to attend one of

» See PETITION, page 7

» See MANDATE, page 6

Katie Pach/Daily Senior Staffer

ASG President Nehaarika Mulukutla and Chief of Staff Lars Benson introduce the Student Group CARE Training Mandate during Senate on Wednesday. The mandate requires student group leaders to attend one Center for Awareness, Response and Education training session on sexual assault.

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