College Republicans On The March
Well-Funded Campus Conservatives Take On Liberal Academia
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One of the most effective ways to raise awareness about anything among the college-age set is to make it more, well, popular. While back in the 1960s heyday of student protests, liberal students charged conservative-leaning professors with marginalizing liberal viewpoints in the classroom, the Republican radicals of today insist that their voices are being silenced by ex-hippie academics.
"When [students] listen to Democrats and their college professors, they're getting a message that's not what they hear at home or in the mainstream media," said CRNC Executive Director Doug McGregor. "And that's just not what they agree with."
They have a point. In the 2004 presidential race, professors at America's top-five schools (ranked by the U.S. News & World Report as Harvard, Princeton, Yale, The University of Pennsylvania and Duke) sent almost 96 percent of their political donations to Senator John Kerry's Democratic campaign. The numbers are even more lopsided in some fields of study. A 2003 survey found that in some departments, such as sociology and anthropology, liberal-leaning faculty outnumbered conservatives by almost thirty-to-one.
According to an increasingly vocal contingent of campus conservatives, the carryover of liberal political bias into the classroom is undeniable.
"I've definitely felt uncomfortable with a professor who was very involved with the Dean Campaign. It was a very small class in my freshman year and I was terrified to let it be known that I was a conservative. I really was afraid that he would attack me and I knew that I would not be able to stand up to him. The man had been a professor for thirty years, and I knew that I didn't know enough then to take him on," said Julie Aud, a junior at the University of Indiana and press secretary for the campus' College Republicans. "As conservatives we should never have to feel uncomfortable in the classroom because of our beliefs."
In response, students have taken matters into their own hands by speaking out in class, challenging their professors and compiling an extensive record of just how often teachers shoot opposing ideas down. And they're doing it systematically.
To document bias, websites run by outside organizations, such as Students for Academic Freedom, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Higher Education, Campus Watch, Speechcodes.org and Noindoctrination.org, encourage students to post examples of their personal experiences. Postings are listed by date or school, with accusations ranging from casual anti-Bush administration remarks and narrowly-focused readings, to all-out refusals to address student comments.
Increasingly, conservatives are also creating their own alternatives to popular on-campus activities that are aimed at ruffling feathers of their liberal counterparts.
Back in February 2003, at the height of the debate over affirmative action at the University of Michigan, -- aimed at defying discrimination by giving minorities priority in the college application process -- the College Republicans at UCLA staged an "Affirmative Action Bake Sale." By charging minorities and women less for brownies and chocolate chip cookies, the chapter intended to rub passersby the wrong way, but the event soon took on a life of its own.
By March, 2005, at least five more had popped up around the west coast, and by the end of the school year, the phenomenon had spread to dozens of chapters throughout the country, inciting controversy in almost every case.
At New York University -- where mohawks, piercings, tattoos and anti-establishment warriors have long found a home -- protesters swarmed the Republicans' table soon after it was set up. Within weeks, an even larger group gathered in a formal rally for affirmative action, on-campus diversity and increased financial aid.
Another on-campus attention grabber is the "Conservative Coming Out Day", which features students touting their viewpoints in central areas of campus, hoping to gain as much attention as possible. As a blatant spoof of popular celebrations of gay, lesbian, queer and transgender sexual orientation that go by a similar name, these "Coming Out Days" are meant to emphasize how marginalized some feel in their day-to-day lives. Often though, they are seen as a mocking attack on liberal sympathies toward issues such as gay marriage and homosexual civil rights, or even as attacks on gays themselves. Either way, they certainly succeed at gaining notice.
Something is working. While in 1999 the organization had fewer than 100,000 students in just over 400 chapters, it has grown today to include over 200,000 members in 1,500 chapters nation-wide.
McGregor attributes this dramatic rise to two factors: the resurrection of their "Field Program", which features hired college students who work full time for the CRNC to spread recruiting tactics, and the popularity of President George W. Bush.
"College students used to go through life and issues didn't really affect them, and I think after 9/11, they stepped back and said 'Hey, this really does affect us,'" said McGregor in attempting to explain the motivation for casual politicos to become activists.
The rise in membership brings with it a greater demand for conservative voices in campus publications, which many say are dominated by liberal commentary and story choices. Thanks in a large part to outside organizations such as the Virginia-based Leadership Institute, which offers one-day workshops on how to either infiltrate existing campus papers, or attract the means to start up their own, this is becoming increasingly possible. Though not officially linked to the College Republicans, the Leadership Institute's Campus Leadership program created 22 new conservative campus publications in 2004. Of course, many of these were aided by $500 grants taken out of the Institute's pockets, but the CRNC is ready and willing to take any assistance it can get.
While the College Republicans have yet to become the coolest club on every campus, they've certainly become more noticeable and they're intent on making themselves heard.
By Lauren H. Clark
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