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Interim President Jeff Ettinger inside Morrill Hall on Sept. 20, 2023. Ettinger gets deep with the Daily: “It’s bittersweet.”
Ettinger reflects on his presidency
Published April 22, 2024

Student campaign strategies shift ahead of midterms

Campaigners for Raymond Dehn, senior Sonia Neculescu and sophomore Aisha Chughtai, offer rides across the Washington Avenue Bridge on Tuesday, Nov. 7.
Image by Ellen Schmidt, Daily File Photo
Campaigners for Raymond Dehn, senior Sonia Neculescu and sophomore Aisha Chughtai, offer rides across the Washington Avenue Bridge on Tuesday, Nov. 7.

As November’s midterm elections approach, University of Minnesota student leaders are shifting away from candidate-driven campaign strategies. 

Political mobilization around campus before August’s primary elections was focused on specific campaigns and student groups, according to student leaders. Now, they say say general election involvement has shifted — student energy is directed more toward voter outreach and collaborative event planning to encourage student voter turnout.

“We’re talking way less about candidates now and more about getting people to vote and pledging to vote,” said Natasha Sohni of Rep. Ilhan Omar, DFL-Minneapolis’s congressional campaign.

August’s primary elections saw historic voting numbers and a focus on student participation in campaigns, which was in part due to some candidates’ engagement around campus, said Sonia Neculescu, chair of DFL Senate District 60 and founder of Women for Political Change.

“In the primaries, we had inspiring candidates that really activated students,” Neculescu said. “We saw a surge of engagement.”

Democratic leaders said students on campus were especially enthusiastic to advocate for former gubernatorial candidate Rep. Erin Murphy, DFL-St. Paul, and her running mate, Rep. Erin Maye Quade, DFL-Apple Valley, in the primaries.

“If we think about people around 18 to 24,  a lot of them were excited about ‘the Erins’ because they made more of an effort to reach out to our age group,” Sohni said. 

Although Murphy’s campaign ended after Rep. Tim Walz, D-Minn., won the DFL primary, student activism still exists on campus, Neculescu said. But the focus is not solely on campaign work. 

“We haven’t seen that student base go towards Walz, but are engaged in a different way,” Neculescu said.

Students are instead focusing on electoral organizing — registering voters and advocating for early voting by door-knocking, phone-banking and canvassing.

“I think that is because there is normally such a low amount of students that turn out, so our number one priority is to make sure that students are able to get to the polls,” said Michaela Muza, campus organizer with the DFL Youth Coordinated Campaign.

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