BY BETHANY BIRON
Daiy Staff Reporter
Published September 20, 2010
With just more than a month until the midterm election, political student groups on campus have been developing strategies to mobilize students around specific candidates and emphasize the importance of voting.
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After the August primaries, which saw Democrat Virg Bernero and Republican Rick Snyder emerge as their party's gubernatorial candidate, groups like the University’s chapters of the College Republicans and College Democrats have been campaigning for their respective candidates and informing students about their policies and goals for the state.
In addition to these groups, students and Public Health and Medicine Prof. Victor Strecher created Wolverines for Rick Snyder last month. The group’s goal is to inform campus about Snyder’s incentives to change Michigan and defy partisan divergence.
Strecher, a personal friend of Snyder, said his primary role as adviser to the group is to increase voter turnout in favor of Snyder and help students within the group develop campaign strategies.
“(Snyder) is a very bright guy who’s also very warm,” Strecher said. “He’s very caring; he’s very passionate. And he wouldn’t be running for governor unless he felt Michigan has a chance at rebuilding itself and becoming an amazing state. “
Strecher said Snyder’s moderate viewpoints make him likeable to both Democrats and Republicans, and this is reflected by the diversity of the group.
“We are a bunch of people from very different political persuasions who all got together to say we’re tired of the status quo,” Strecher said. “We really are worried about Michigan and we’d love to make Michigan a place that we all want to stay and work in.”
The group hopes to work with neighboring universities, like Michigan State University, to continue to increase support for Snyder.
“I believe that the students who are involved in the campaign for Rick Snyder are interested in pulling people together more toward a common ground,” Strecher said.
Brendan Campbell, chair of College Democrats, said he believes that despite the fact that Snyder has received increased support from Democrats, Virg Bernero is the best candidate for representing student needs, largely because he strongly supports greater funding for Michigan's schools.
“Virg Bernero has consistently demonstrated that he’s going to invest in education, both K-12 and higher education, and adequately fund education to the point that it needs to be funded,” Campbell said. “We think that students have been hit hard enough, and that it’s time students vote for a candidate who’s looking out for their best interests.”
LSA senior Joshua Arocho, the communications director for Wolverines for Rick Snyder, said that while Snyder has widespread appeal that transcends partisan lines, his election could also make strides for the Republican Party.
“We feel like we can make a pretty big impact on this traditionally liberal campus,” Arocho said.
Arocho added that the group aims to gain more members through an upcoming mass meeting. Group members are also trying to host a town hall-type event for Snyder to speak to students, as well as have him speak on the steps of the Michigan Union in the week leading up to the election.
Charles Bogren, chairman of College Republicans, said he believes Snyder has been receiving increased support because he is genuinely concerned about fixing the state, in addition to his strong business background.
“He’s a self-made man,” Bogren said. “He’s clearly an intelligent person who knows what he wants to do in the business world and wants to bring that over to the political side and fix the state of Michigan. I think that’s resonated really well with a lot of people in this state because this state has had a lot of problems in the past.”
Bogren said the support Snyder has received from Democrats shows his dedication to improving the state and uniting people together to reach this goal.





















