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Cornell Republicans

Cornell Republicans Prepare for November Election

Emma Court  —  Jan 26, 2012

After a disappointing turnout campaigning for the New Hampshire Republican primaries over break, Cornell Republicans back on campus are preparing to mobilize for the election year.

Student Assembly Debates Resolution to Improve Accessibility for People With Disabilities

Laura Shepard  —  Apr 8, 2011

The Student Assembly debated Resolution 77, which would require student organizations to make their events accessible to people with disabilities.

Cornell Republicans, Democrats Debate Gay Marriage Rights

Liz Camuti and ...  —  Apr 8, 2011

The Cornell Democrats and the Cornell Republicans debated social issues Thursday night.

Cornell Students Gear Up for 2012 Presidential Race

Alyson Warhit  —  Mar 11, 2011

Although the 2012 presidential election is more than a year away, one group of Cornell students has already begun to mobilize.

Education Critical to Economic Success, Obama Says in State of the Union

Eliza LaJoie  —  Jan 26, 2011

Cornell's student body reacted along predictably partisan lines to President Barack Obama's State of the Union Address.

In Midterms, Youth Vote Still Matters

Sep 15, 2010

As the midterm elections inch closer, the post-2008 political hangover still lingers over youth voter turnout.

Dems and Republicans Debate Implications of Current Media

Sandie Cheng  —  Apr 8, 2009

The Cornell Democrats and The College Republicans found common ground in Rockefeller Hall last night during a debate concerning media bias and its effect on civic education. The debate was sponsored by the newly founded Freedom and Free Societies. The sponsors of the debate defined civic education as education enabling citizens to make informed decisions concerning public policy and elected officials.

“Bias is inevitable,” said Prof. Barry Strauss, history, one of the judges of the debate. “You have to force yourself to look at different points of view regularly and accept [that] media bias is real.”

While both republicans and democrats agreed that bias exists within the media and results in the decline of civic education, they disagreed on why and how the bias is elicited.

N.Y. Registration: Reducing Vote’s Impact?

Brian Karlovitz  —  Sep 17, 2008

The voter registration tables provided by the Cornell Democrats and College Republicans are a familiar sight to most Cornellians, and many feel that students helping other students “get out the vote” is a positive service to the campus community. But when out-of-state students register to vote in Tompkins County, are they potentially diminishing their political power? Are they affecting campaign strategies and election outcomes?

Elizabeth W. Kree, co-commissioner of the Tompkins County Board of Elections, explained that New York State law has given college students the right to register to vote using their college addresses since the mid-1980s. However, to the politically active on campus, the decision of out-of-staters to vote in-state has a strategic motive.

Campus Republicans, Dems Debate Terrorism, Iraq War

Christine Ryu  —  Nov 15, 2007

Rockefeller Hall may be far from Washington, but it played host to a decidedly political event last night as the Cornell Democrats and College Republicans met to debate the War on Terror. In their first debate of the year, panelists from each side discussed Iraq, multilateralism and the nature of terrorism.

Each club had three panelists. Tim Krueger ’08, Randy Lariar ’08 and Ethan Felder ’09 represented the Democrats while David Goochee ’09, John Farragut ’11 and Brian Wolfel ’10 spoke for the Republicans. Each side was given three minutes for opening statements.

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