LU hoping for strong voter turnout on Tuesday

LU hoping for strong voter turnout on Tuesday

Kim Raff/News & Advance file photo

Members of Liberty University College Republicans set up campaign signs outside of Thomas Johnson Furniture during Bob McDonnell’s ‘New Jobs, New Virginia’ tour stop on Oct. 21. The school, whose students can now vote locally, has canceled classes on Election Day.

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With as many as 3,200 Liberty University students eligible to vote in Tuesday’s election, the school has turned into a battleground for local politics.

To encourage a strong turnout on Election Day, the university canceled classes and announced plans to run buses to the polls.

Meanwhile, the election is unfolding across campus, from dorm-room debates to a 10-page election special in the student newspaper.

Friday morning, Republican Scott Garrett manned the main entrance to the Vines Center as thousands of students flooded past for convocation — a required event for all on-campus undergraduates. Garrett, who is challenging Del. Shannon Valentine in Lynchburg’s House of Delegates race, shook hands with students and encouraged them to vote.

A few feet away, members from the College Democrats and College Republican clubs distributed hundreds of pieces of campaign literature for Valentine and Garrett, respectively.

Friday was just one example of how the elections are playing out at Liberty.

The wheels began turning early this semester, when the university launched a campus-wide effort to get students to vote in local elections. Through its voter registration drive, more than 1,700 students registered to vote before last month’s deadline, Chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr. said.

Liberty’s first concerted voter registration drive took place last fall, when about 4,000 students registered to vote in the presidential election. Falwell has said that while he hopes for a strong showing on Election Day, the school is more interested in City Council elections next spring.

Still, the campus drew a convocation visit from Republican gubernatorial candidate Bob McDonnell in October, and members of the Republican club have been steady volunteers at the city’s GOP headquarters on Wards Road this fall.

Many of them were present at a rally Friday that featured McDonnell and Michael Steele, the Republican Party’s national chairman, as well as candidates Bill Bolling for lieutenant governor and Ken Cuccinelli for attorney general. At one point, Cuccinelli told the students that their turnout could boost Garrett into office.

While Republican candidates are enthusiastic about the prospects of a favorable bump by Liberty student voters, student attitudes toward Tuesday’s election range from apathy to mild interest to gung-ho enthusiasm.

For some, it’s an opportunity to have a voice in local politics, for others it’s simply a day off from classes, with perks like free ice skating and open dorms — a rare event when the single-sex dorms open their doors to the opposite gender.

Derek Kitchen, a sophomore and Delaware native, registered as a Lynchburg voter last fall so he could vote in a swing state for the presidential elections.

“I don’t know that much about the local elections since I’m not from here,” he said.

Kitchen plans to vote on Tuesday, after he does more research on the candidates.

“I’m not super hardcore for one candidate or another.”

Wesley Reed walked out of the Vines Center Friday holding a large “Bob 4 Jobs” sign that he picked up from the College Republicans table. Though he is registered to vote in his home state of Ohio, Reed has been following local politics.

“It’s nice just to know what’s going on,” he said.

For the College Democrats, the election provides an opportunity to move forward after a summer tinged by controversy.

Last May, LU withdrew its recognition of the College Democrats club, mostly because of the national Democratic Party’s pro-choice and pro-gay marriage platform.

After a month of back-and-forth negotiations, Falwell announced a change to university policy that put the club on equal footing with the College Republicans: both clubs became unofficial.

“What happened in the summer, I think that’s in the past,” said College Democrats president Joel Krautter.

Both clubs reported a slight drop in student membership, with the Democrats at about 25 members and the Republicans hovering near 50.

But in recent weeks, club leaders report that the election has provided a boost of support.

Zach Martin, second vice chairman of the College Republicans, has spent the last few weeks recruiting new members. He said the College Republicans provided a steady stream of students to make nightly phone calls to voters from the Republican Party’s Lynchburg headquarters on Wards Road.

“For me, it’s the idea of having conservative leaders in the community. Getting those people who have Christian mindsets to make good, Godly decisions,” Martin said.

Jonathan Dimanche, a sophomore from Long Island, attended his first College Democrats meeting this semester. He is registered to vote in Lynchburg, and plans to cast his ballot after doing more research on the candidates.

“Coming down here to a conservative bubble kind of made me feel like an outcast,” Dimanche said, adding that he is determined to “stand and not waver” on his views.

For College Democrat member Israel Jackson, the election is as much about getting students to vote as it is about embracing political diversity.

“I think it’s essential that this university gets perspectives from both sides of the aisle,” Jackson said.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by brandon on November 02, 2009 at 2:21 pm

Can someone please tell me all these great things Liberty has done? Besides making Lynchburg infamous because of all the ridiculous news to come from the Falwells and the university.

Flag Comment Posted by Johnnyondaspot on November 02, 2009 at 2:20 pm

Scoripous - I am on your side now.  We need to throw out those conservatives, their conservative allies, and their job killing policies.  Right??

Flag Comment Posted by Johnnyondaspot on November 02, 2009 at 2:08 pm

Scoripous - all these new liberal posters are a last grasp from the left.  You guys are not only going “O-FER” tomorrow (0-4 for those that do not follow sports) you are going to lose in a landslide.  A pounding.  Back up the truck the party is OVER!

Flag Comment Posted by Cozmos Shadow on November 02, 2009 at 2:05 pm

I heard a rumor that in June the entire city will be shut down and all the tax money will be funneled into projects for more tatoos and tree cutting.  That is my kind of agenda!

Flag Comment Posted by Lord_Kappa on November 02, 2009 at 2:02 pm

This conversation is shameful.

Can’t you three or four troublemakers take the example from the rest of us who disagreed with each other with civil conversation?

The most recent posts are ridiculous. You should examine yourselves and remember the quote that Abraham Lincoln shared; “It is better to be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.“

Flag Comment Posted by Cozmos Shadow on November 02, 2009 at 2:01 pm

Packer - use spell check.  You misspelled judgment.

Flag Comment Posted by Cozmos Shadow on November 02, 2009 at 1:59 pm

I have been promised the ‘head sanitation engineering job’ so Packer - you just lost sewer.  Wanna try for water too?  Just wait until you get on the bad side of the new dog catcher - Zeltar!

Flag Comment Posted by scorpious on November 02, 2009 at 1:59 pm

(j)...yes, I do believe that Johnathan is a Godly man, but, come on…don’t you get just a little tired of his: SHOW AND TELL….every Sunday!? Is HE a minister or, a political figure? My minister NEVER, get’s involved with politics, he preaches the WORD!  After all, did Christ come to save the lost?

Pastor Dodson, TREE-OF-LIFE-sticks to the word of God, isen’t that what is important here? Is God in control, or not???????

Flag Comment Posted by Johnnyondaspot on November 02, 2009 at 1:54 pm

Scoripous - if you keep running your mouth no garbage pick up at your house.  How you like them apples?

Flag Comment Posted by Johnnyondaspot on November 02, 2009 at 1:52 pm

Scorpious - you are right.  Once we take over the heck with the roads!  You can walk..  that is unless you are 400 lbs.

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