Elections and Campaign Management program – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Mon, 16 Dec 2024 15:54:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Elections and Campaign Management program – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 How Campus Outreach Led to a Career Path in Strategic Communications https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/how-campus-outreach-led-to-a-career-path-in-strategic-communications/ Fri, 18 Dec 2020 16:01:30 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=143822 Photo courtesy of John Morin.For John Morin, FCRH ’20, a combination of academic experiences and extracurricular activities helped lay the groundwork for his postgraduate studies and career plans. Whether he was discussing complex issues in class, representing Fordham to prospective students as a campus tour guide and member of the Rose Hill Society, or talking with Fordham alumni in his role at the RamLine call center, Morin says he was exposed to diverse experiences and perspectives during his undergraduate years at Fordham. As a political science major with minors in American studies and mathematics, he learned to have constructive conversations on difficult topics and dive into societal issues, two skills that serve him well as he pursues a graduate degree in elections and campaign management from Fordham’s Graduate School of Arts and Science. He also completed internships with two political strategy firms, Mercury LLC and Berger Hirschberg Strategies, which helped him land a job this year as a communications associate at Regis High School, his alma mater.

What are some of the reasons why you decided to attend Fordham?
A major selling point of Fordham for me was definitely the ability to have both a traditional campus feel while having access to the many resources a major city provides. At the Rose Hill campus, I loved the idea of being able to travel to other boroughs and explore different cultures, landmarks, and entertainment opportunities, and at the same time being able to spend a sunny day relaxing on Eddies Parade with my friends. The possibilities were endless both on and off campus, making Fordham the perfect choice.

I also gravitated toward the small class sizes offered at Fordham. With most classes having only about 25 students, I saw myself being a true part of the University, actively engaging with peers and professors about larger issues facing the world. Fordham was dedicated to seeing its students grow as both individuals and as members of a larger community—one that I am proud to be a part of.

What do you think you got at Fordham that you couldn’t have gotten elsewhere?
Fordham allowed me to meet so many wonderful and interesting people from completely different walks of life. Particularly as a political science major, I was always surrounded by diverse experiences and perspectives, and the ability to have constructive conversations on complicated issues with my peers was amazing. In a larger sense, the Fordham community is so incredibly strong and supportive. Fordham students care for and support one another, and the friends I have made will always mean something special.

Did you take any courses or have any experiences that helped put you on your current path?
While not directly related to what I am doing now, my three years at the RamLine call center [reaching out to Fordham alumni and parents of current Fordham students]taught me many important skills and gave me valuable insight into the kinds of work I want to do in the future. As both a student caller and a supervisor, I learned strategies to successfully engage with individuals with vastly different experiences than I [have], listening to them and meeting them where they are at so that they know they are understood and appreciated. More importantly, working at the call center made me realize how proud I was to be a Fordham student. There was never a point when talking about my job or life at school felt forced, and every call was just another opportunity to talk about the people, classes, and opportunities I loved so much. Having graduated, I want to be able to work somewhere and say that I have a true passion for what I’m doing.

Who is the Fordham professor or person you admire the most, and why?
Professor Diane Detournay taught the introductory course to my American studies minor, and it ended up becoming one of the most important experiences I had at Fordham. I think there is a tendency to present U.S. history to kids in simplistic terms, and before coming to college I had never really sat down and considered the larger issues that have and continue to shape America and its people. In Diane’s class, we were primarily tasked with having these conversations, thinking about the institutions and structures in society we take for granted, and how they shape the America we live in today. Never had I had a professor so passionate about the work they were doing, wanting her students to challenge conventional thinking and advocate for needed change. Diane taught me about my duty to be good citizen, and the ideas she presented will always [stay]with me.

What are you doing now, and what do you hope to accomplish, personally or professionally?
Right now, I’m working in the development office of my high school creating communications and media strategies. I am responsible for designing content on our platforms that tells the story of the school while encouraging our immediate and broader communities (alumni, parents, friends) to continue feeling engaged and supporting our mission. Curating our social media presence and publishing articles on our website and in our magazine have been some of my most recent responsibilities.

At night, I am pursuing a graduate degree from Fordham in elections and campaign management. The program has given me a wide look into the opportunities to work in politics, and with the current work I am doing, I am hoping to get involved in the communications planning for candidates running for office.

What are you optimistic about?
I’m optimistic about the kind of world my generation can create. Particularly now, we have seen young people be so passionate about the issues they are fighting for, and [be]truly invested in making the world a better place for all of us. My peers and I care deeply about one another and advocate for our collective well-being, and it is that mindset that will always give me hope.

Anything else we should know about you, your plans, or your Fordham connection?
I’m excited for the day we can come back to campus and celebrate the end of my senior year. This year was certainly not what anyone was expecting, so I look forward to reconnecting with classmates I haven’t seen in a while and experiencing [what]we would have had in May.

]]>
143822
Classes to Careers: Class of 2020’s Next Steps in a Pandemic https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/classes-to-careers-class-of-2020s-next-steps-in-a-pandemic/ Fri, 18 Dec 2020 14:26:34 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=143705 We spoke with six members of the Class of 2020 about how their Fordham experiences have helped them begin careers or further their studies, despite the challenges of the COVID-19 crisis.

Elsa Au-Yeung
Photo provided by Elsa Au-Yeung.

Elsa Au-Yeung

School: Fordham College at Rose Hill

Major: Biological Sciences

Minor: Bioethics

Current Job: Research Associate, Inflammation and Immunology, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals

“One of the things I am the most grateful for from my experience at Fordham was actually learning about things not related to my major. Since we are required to take the core curriculum, I was exposed to so many different classes I never would have taken otherwise. These courses refined the way I think about virtually everything. Buddhism in America helped me discover my interest in Buddhism, and Intro to Bioethics challenged many preconceived beliefs I had about the health care industry and controversial ethicists.”

Read more of Elsa Au-Yeung’s story.

Reed Bihary
Photo provided by Reed Bihary.

Reed Bihary

School: Gabelli School of Business

Major: Business Administration

Concentrations: Finance, Global Business

Minor: Economics

Current Job: Corporate and Institutional Banking Development Program Associate, PNC Financial Services

“Through the Gabelli School of Business, I was immediately taught the importance of networking, which helped me land multiple internships and gain a better understanding of which profession I wanted to pursue after graduation. The Fordham Mentoring Program helped to prepare me for interviews and expand my professional network. Connections I made with alumni through this program were pivotal in aligning me with the job I have today.”

Read more of Reed Bihary’s story.

Natalie Migliore
Photo provided by Natalie Migliore.

Natalie Migliore

School: Fordham College at Rose Hill

Major: Journalism

Minor: Communication and Media Studies

Current Job: News Anchor/Writer, iHeartMedia

“Working at WFUV was hands down the best decision I ever made. It changed the trajectory of my life. I was going to be a business major, and walking into WFUV, I just fell in love with journalism. I wouldn’t have known about the position at iHeartMedia if it weren’t for having a connection from Fordham and WFUV. That reinforced [the importance of the]alumni network. Another thing I wouldn’t have gotten almost anywhere else was the small class sizes at Fordham. I built great relationships with my professors, and they’ve become great mentors to me.”

Read more of Natalie Migliore’s story.

John Morin
Photo provided by John Morin.

John Morin

School: Fordham College at Rose Hill

Major: Political Science

Minors: American Studies, Mathematics

Current Job and Studies: Communications Associate, Regis High School; M.A. Candidate, Elections and Campaign Management, Fordham

“I was always surrounded by diverse experiences and perspectives, and the ability to have constructive conversations on complicated issues with my peers was amazing. The intro course for my American studies minor was one of the most important experiences I had. The professor, Diane Detournay, wanted us to challenge conventional thinking and advocate for needed change. The ideas she presented in class, I will always carry with me.”

Read more of John Morin’s story.

Finley Peay
Photo provided by Finley Peay.

Finley Peay

School: Fordham College at Lincoln Center

Majors: Political Science, American Studies

Concentration: American Catholic Studies

Minor: Theology

Current Studies and Job: M.A. Candidate, Higher Education and Student Affairs, NYU; Graduate Assistant, Columbia University’s Office of University Life

“The biggest thing that I got out of Fordham was the breadth of the mentorship network. I got the best of both worlds participating in academics and student involvement at both Lincoln Center and Rose Hill. I’m still in touch with a lot of the administrators I worked with in the Office for Student Involvement. That’s one of the things I cherish the most: the number of people I met who genuinely care about students.”

Read more of Finley Peay’s story.

Julie Tin
Photo provided by Julie Tin.

Julie Tin

School: Fordham College at Lincoln Center

Major: Psychology

Minor: Mandarin Chinese

Current Job: Human Resources Administrative Assistant, University Settlement, The Door, Broome Street Academy Charter High School

“Right now I work for a family of New York City organizations that give back to immigrant and low-income communities and provide services to disconnected youth. I had interned there during college, but I had little to no experience in the office setting before I was placed in Fordham’s Office of Alumni Relations for work-study. Through the staff’s guidance and instruction, I was able to develop data management, communication, and organizational skills that serve as the core of my professional abilities.”

Read more of Julie Tin’s story.

—Reporting by Chris Gosier, Adam Kaufman, Kelly Kultys, and Sierra McCleary-Harris

]]>
143705
Election 2020 Likely to be Chaotic, Says Professor https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/election-2020-likely-to-be-chaotic-says-professor/ Tue, 29 Sep 2020 17:12:40 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=141088 This fall was always going to be a tumultuous time for the United States thanks to a nationwide election on November 3rd that will determine who will be president next year. Mail-in voting has been embraced as a way to keep voters safe from the pandemic, and although many states have successfully held elections via mail and vote, there are real questions about how to expand it to the rest of the nation.

In a new Fordham News podcast, political science professor Monika McDermott, Ph.D., explains why it’s essential that we make plans to vote right now. McDermott, Ph.D., the director of Fordham’s master’s program in elections and campaign management. taught the first cohort of students enrolled in the Graduate School of Arts and Science’ advanced certificate in public opinion and survey research this past spring. Their capstone project was the Fordham poll, a survey designed to address areas of American life that had been overlooked by most pollsters and was retooled to reflect life during the pandemic.

For information about early voting and absentee voting in your state, visit USA.gov/absentee-voting.
For information on early voting in New York City, visit vote.nyc/page/early-voting-information.
To learn about provisional ballots, visit this explainer at the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Listen below

 

Full transcript below:

Monika McDermott: It’s really going to be a trial for our democratic system, and how much confidence people have in our government and how much confidence people have in our voting system. And that’s what we’re waiting to see, is how it all plays out.

Patrick Verel: This fall was always going to be a tumultuous time for the United States thanks to a nationwide election on November 3rd that will determine who will be president next year. But with less than 40 days left until election day, the COVID-19 pandemic is still raging, making it even more challenging. It’s not clear how safe it will be for most Americans to vote in person, and although many states have successfully held elections via mail and vote, there are real questions about how to expand it to the rest of the nation. To get a handle on this problem we sat down with Monika McDermott, a professor of political science and the director of Fordham’s master’s program in elections and campaign management. This spring, McDermott taught the first cohort of students enrolled in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences’ advanced certificate in public opinion and survey research. Their capstone project was the Fordham Poll, a survey designed to address areas of American life that had been overlooked by most pollsters and was retooled to reflect life during the pandemic. I’m Patrick Verel, and this is Fordham news.

How confident are you that the upcoming election will go smoothly?

MM: I would like to say I’m confident, but in reality I don’t think I have a lot of confidence at this point that it’s going to go smoothly.

PV: What worries you most?

MM: Well, we’re in the middle of this perfect storm of everything coming together at once, and obviously the coronavirus is the number one problem that we’re facing. You’ve got the tightness of the presidential race in some states, and added to that you’ve got issues with mailing balloting and the differences in rules and regulations across the state. And you’ve got concerns about the postal service, and you’ve got CIA warnings of Russian influence in the election, and also China and Iran meddling in the election. And then to add to that, you’ve got what’s been happening over the past, since about 2012, you’ve got closing of polling stations in high minority areas that are potentially suppressing the vote for some people. And that’s also coming to a head in this election.

PV: Even before the pandemic, five states actually conducted all their elections primarily by mail. Yet many have raised concerns about the validity of mail-in and absentee ballots, including the president. Is there an actual difference between mail-in voting and absentee voting?

MM: So yeah, there is a technical difference between those two. So the states that do mail-in voting, all-mail voting, those states send out ballots to everyone who is registered to vote automatically. If you’re talking absentee voting that technically is people have to request a ballot from the state and receive it. And they have to supposedly have an excuse, although some states are waving that this year, such as New York, they’re saying COVID is a good enough excuse. And so you have to actually take the active step to request a ballot, whereas in mail-in voting, basically, they’re giving you, they’re sending it out to everybody and that’s Trump’s complaint here.

PV: But I mean, is there a difference in terms of one being more prone to being ripe for fraud?

MM: There’s no evidence of that. Places like Washington and Oregon say that they have no more fraud with their mail-in systems that they had before mailing systems. So, no, there’s actually no quantitative evidence that there is a difference.

PV: Now, last month the House passed a bill that would provide the post office with $25 billion in funds to help it deal with an unexpected increase in mail-in ballots this fall, the Senate opted not to pass it. That same week or roughly around that same time, postmaster general Louis DeJoy told the house oversight committee that the post office “we’ll do everything in our power and structure to deliver the ballots on time”. What do you make of all this? Is this something we should be concerned with at all?

MM: I think, yeah, there are reasons to be concerned. I do. There’s been mostly anecdotal evidence of slowdown of the mail service and given how much they’re going to need to be on the ball for this election, given the increase in mail balloting it’s concerning, it should concern everyone. Like I said, there’s anecdotal evidence that there could be problems just handling the regular mail delivery right now. And so when you think about the impact that all of these absentee ballots or mail-in ballots are going to have on the US postal service, it really is a little bit frightening.

PV:  The thing that I’ve heard that could be problematic is where you have ballots that are cast in person, that are counted earlier. And then you have the mail-in ballots, which will be counted later. And so you run the risk that one candidate basically declares victory before all the ballots have been fully counted and then questions the validity of the mail-ins.

MM: That’s why there’s going to be conflict after this election, no doubt, because unless you do have a strong winner on election night, which there’s no reason to believe there will be one, unless you do have that, you’re going to have court cases and accusations of fraud and mistrust on both sides. And questions about the legitimacy of the next president. It’s really going to be a trial for our democratic system and how people, how much confidence people have in our government and how much confidence people have in our voting system. And that’s what we’re waiting to see is how it all plays out.

PV: A lot of the talk when it comes to these ballots is focused on the delivery, right? That some of them might not make it in time and there’s different levels of like, okay, it gets counted if it’s postmarked by a day, versus it gets a rise by a certain date. So there’s been a lot of focus on that. Are there any other things that you can think of that people should know about when it comes to these absentee ballots that might be areas of concern?

MM: Well, the problem with the system of absentee balloting in the United States is that every state has its own rules. And so the thing voters have to worry about is informing themselves of the rules of their state and abiding by those rules. And that means acting in time, allowing plenty of time for the whole process to happen for you to get your ballot and return it and then have it received by the government and then have it counted. So really it’s just a question of informing yourself about what the rules are. And we know from a lot of political science research that’s been done in the past, American voters aren’t good at informing themselves on rules. That’s not what they do. They’re used to habits, habituated behavior. And if we change it up on them, they’re going to be ballots that are returned after the date, they’re going to be postmarked late. And then they’re going to be questions about whether they’re valid and yeah, it’s going to look like Florida 2000 all over, but with a mail-in system, rather than with the hanging CHADS that we saw at that point in time.

PV: Yeah. I mean, I think I heard that as a percentage-wise, absentee ballots are rejected by a larger margin than votes cast in person. That’s just a fact because people just don’t do things right.

MM: And it’s not just the voters, it’s also the states. Sometimes the states, the post office actually, gets ballots that don’t have the scan codes that they need to have on them for them to process them appropriately. And so that’s a problem that a state might have. They might have envelopes, return envelopes that weren’t printed correctly. Or we actually had friends of ours who voted in the Democratic primary this year and they voted absentee and their envelope, their return envelope was too small for their ballot. So they actually had to call up the government and get another ballot or another return envelope sent to them. And so luckily they were doing this all in time and as far as they know their vote counted, but it was last moment and very frustrating for them.

PV: Do you think the accuracy of polls is affected in any way by the fact that so many people will be voting by mail?

MM: Well, it doesn’t really affect the day-to-day polling that pollsters do because they’re still running likely voter models and trying to estimate who’s likely to vote, which they’re taking into account absentee voting and mail-in voting. So they’re working with new models for that. So that is a little bit tricky, but they’ve been doing this for years and they’re very smart people and they know what they’re doing. I think the main problem, although this is being accounted for as well, are the exit polls that we’re used to getting on election day themselves, which are polls that come as people leave their polling places. Those are going to have to switch over to a lot of telephone polling of mail voters before the election. Now, they’ve already been doing this for years with places like Oregon and Washington, because they’ve had to, so they’re incorporating that into what they’re doing this year, but there could be some glitches there. That’s going to be interesting to watch.

PV: Wow. So this is really going to be unpredictable on November 3rd. It sounds like?

MM: Oh yeah. There’s very little chance that we’ll know any winner on November 3rd.

PV: Best case scenario, what do you think it’ll be announced? We’ll actually have a clear winner?

MM: Best case scenario, I would say within a few days of the election or inside a week, but that’s being a little bit optimistic. I think. So, I just think that a lot of states that aren’t used to dealing with the number of absentee ballots that they’re going to get, are going to have trouble counting them in time and that’s going to be what delays things. And it’s fine, it should be delayed. I mean, we want these votes counted and we want them counted accurately. The problem is going to be that, as you said, if there’s a red wave or even a blue wave and someone decides to claim victory before all the votes are actually counted, then that’s going to call into question the legitimacy of the election. And that’s going to be a major problem for us. But if we can just sit tight and wait for the election results to come in and wait for all the votes to be counted, then I think we’ll be okay.

PV: Has there been any polling done on what people’s expectations are for when the results will be revealed?

MM: I haven’t seen any polling on that. There’s some really interesting polling on how people are going to vote and how they feel about going to an all-mail system and things like that. And they’re very supportive of letting people vote by mail if they want to. But most people themselves say they’re going to vote in person.

PV: Really? In general, still?

MM: Yep. Either early voting. Yes. Those were August numbers I think I saw. Yeah. So they either vote early in person in states that allow it or in-person on election day.

PV: Well, what is the percentage of people in the United States who are actually planning to vote in person or in early voting?

MM: So according to the most recent numbers, I saw 48% of people plan on voting on election day and another 13% plan on voting in-person early voting.

PV: What do the polls tell us about American’s confidence in mail-in voting?

MM: As a general rule, people are skeptical. Almost half of people say that they think there’s going to be some kind of fraud involved in absentee voting. So it’s pretty split and of course, there’s a huge partisan split here, but slightly more believe that there will be fraud than believe that there will be very minimal or no fraud at all. The interesting thing though, is that you actually have, when you ask people, if they’re confident, if they vote by mail that their own vote will count, they say that they’re confident in that. So they’re confident that their own vote is fine, but they’re also convinced by the messaging that they’re getting from above that there will be some fraud involved if there are large numbers of absentee votes.

PV: That’s so interesting. So they believe their own votes will be counted correctly if they mail them in, but they believe everybody else who’s mailing in their votes are highly at risk for fraud?

MM: Yeah. This phenomenon we see with all kinds of things in the political science research. It’s an, I’m okay, but my neighbor’s not kind of thing. And what I think is happening is that people in red states are confident their vote will be counted because they’re confident that their government is doing a good job. But they believe there’s fraud overall, they just believe that fraud is going to happen in the blue states. And so they’re setting themselves up for a situation in which they can say all of Biden’s votes that came in after the fact, after November 3rd, those are fraudulent because there was fraud in those states because there’s a very big partisan split there. And I would imagine that’s what’s going on, is that people are thinking that their own absentee voting will be counted well in their state, but they don’t trust other states.

PV: What should people do to make sure their votes count?

MM: If you’re voting by mail or absentee, a lot of states that you can actually online track the status of your absentee ballot. So if you send it in, you can track it there online and make sure that it goes in and gets counted. So I would say, definitely do that, track your ballot, make sure it goes in. And if it doesn’t seem to have gone in by election day, then go in, if you feel like it and cast a provisional ballot at your polling place. Other than that, the only sure way to make sure your vote is candid is to actually vote in person. I hate to say that because I know there are people who are susceptible to the virus and who have underlying health symptoms and things like that, but that is the one certain way to make sure your vote counts.

PV: One thing that came up was this idea of casting a absentee ballot, and then going into the polling place and also casting a ballot. That was something that Trump had suggested in, I believe it was North Carolina and everybody said, “Oh, you’re suggesting that they all break the law.” But then I heard from a friend, a colleague, that you can do that kind of thing in New York State that that’s not considered breaking the law. What do voters need to know about casting a second ballot in person if they’ve already sent one in by mail?

MM: My understanding is that at least in New York and I don’t know about all the other states, my understanding is that if you have reason to believe your absentee ballot didn’t make it in on time, that you have a right to cast an in-person provisional ballot that will only be counted if your absentee ballot wasn’t counted. And so if they find two ballots for you, they will throw out the provisional ballot and they will count your absentee vote. But you can’t actually vote twice. Now, in all mail voting states, obviously you can’t do that. Those are completely reliant, but I would worry much less about votes not being counted in those states because there are systems that are set up and ready to deal with the influx of mail that they get. I’m just afraid that other states aren’t ready for it.

PV: It seems like that early voting is going to be a much more important factor in the election this time around, because you can be sure your vote will count because you’re going in person. But you can also minimize the risk of being exposed to the virus by going when there won’t be nearly as many people around, that seems like that’s the sweet spot right now.

MM: Absolutely. And yet you’ve only got 13% saying that they’re going to do early voting. So people seem to like the tradition of election day. And that’s the only thing I can think of is that they want to go in and vote on November 3rd and that’s the way they’ve done it and that’s the way they’re going to continue to do it. So yeah, we’ll see what the numbers actually show and how many people do vote early. But at this point, it’s a pretty small proportion.

PV: Is there anything that gives you hope when it comes to the election?

MM: Yes, I have hope in the American, I have faith in the American people. I believe that despite the coronavirus, despite all the problems we’ve seen this year and the disasters that have befallen on us from coast to coast, I believe that people will turn out to vote. I believe they care about who wins the election and I believe that they will make it happen in whatever way, shape or form they have to. If they have to stand in line forever, I think they’ll stand in line. If they have to do absentee voting, they’ll do it. I think I have faith that Americans will stand up for their democracy.

PV: For more information about your state’s rules on voting, including provisional votes in New York State visit fordham.edu/vote2020.

]]>
141088
Fordham-Designed Poll Reveals Attitudes, Inequities Prevalent During COVID-19 https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/fordham-designed-polls-reveal-attitudes-inequities-prevalent-during-covid-19/ Tue, 05 May 2020 14:36:00 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=135650 When Monika McDermott, Ph.D., met in January with students enrolled in the inaugural cohort of the Graduate School of Arts and Science’s advanced certificate in public opinion and survey research, she cautioned them that it’s not uncommon that polls sometimes need to be changed at the last minute to reflect current events and the concerns of the public.

“You need to go with what’s newsworthy and with what’s going to garner the public interest and inform people, because that’s the whole reason for doing this,” she told the students, who were designing a survey on major issues facing Americans today.

Monika McDermott
Photo by Chris Taggart

She had no idea at the time—weeks before the COVID-19 outbreak forced the University to close its campuses—that the lesson would be so timely.

“I never in my wildest dreams imagined this scenario, in these extreme circumstances,” said McDermott, professor of political science and director of the Elections and Campaign Management master’s program.

Working remotely, McDermott and the four students ripped up the poll they’d spent a third of the semester working on and drafted 23 brand new questions that examine American society in the time of COVID-19.

The result is the Fordham Poll, a survey that was originally designed to address areas of American life that have been overlooked by most pollsters today but was retooled to reflect the life during a pandemic. The results of the poll, which was conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago, were published the last week of April.

It covered areas such as the upcoming presidential election, how the pandemic has affected black Americans, the role that faith is playing in American’s lives, and people’s attitudes toward health care. It took place between April 16 and April 20 among 1,003 respondents nationwide by phone and has a margin of sampling error of 4.33 percentage points.

Faith in Governors, Not President

The first group of questions, detailed in The Coronavirus, the Election, and Daily Life section, revealed that Americans are most likely to turn to public health officials, their state governors, or friends and families for guidance during the coronavirus pandemic. Only 43% of Americans say President Trump is a very or somewhat important source of guidance at this time. McDermott said that perhaps as a result, he trails his presumptive challenger in the November presidential election polls, Joe Biden.

A Nation Divided by Illness

Questions grouped together in the Black Americans Bear the Burden of Coronavirus section showed the emotional toll the virus is taking on black and Latinx Americans, as evidence has emerged showing that coronavirus infections are disproportionately higher in areas with high minority populations.

Nearly half of black and Latinx Americans surveyed reported being extremely or very worried that they or someone in their family will contract the virus, compared to only 38% of whites. Additionally, black Americans are more likely than either white or Latinx Americans to be on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic, with higher proportions still required to show up to a workplace. They also reported higher rates of personal infection, and of the death of someone they personally know.

McDermott said she considered these findings to be the most significant in the poll.

“The experiences of white and black Americans, and the disparity between those two groups, was not shocking, because we knew they would be there, but they really were so different. The disparity is so huge,” she said.

“It was very sobering to see those numbers and to realize it’s not uniformly affecting people. To get a sense of that in a public opinion poll was really important.”

The Role of Faith

And how are Americans in general coping? In a section titled Faith and Coping with the Coronavirus Outbreak, pollsters learned that a large majority has found consolation in their religious or spiritual faith.

Sixty-four percent of Americans have been helped by their religious or spiritual faith during the coronavirus outbreak–including 35% who have been helped a lot and 29% who have been helped somewhat. Those numbers are higher among regular churchgoers.

White evangelical Protestants reported being helped the most by their faith, while three-quarters of mainline Protestants and 62% of Catholics reported that faith has somewhat helped them during the pandemic.

“Religious and spiritual faith is important sustenance for most Americans during this time of crisis,” said McDermott. “Faith is helping them get through.”

Attitudes on Health Care

The last section, The Coronavirus and Attitudes towards Healthcare in America, found that despite apparent gaps in the U.S. health care system during the coronavirus outbreak, Americans are generally satisfied with the system’s performance.

More than seven in 10 Americans reported being satisfied with how the American health care system is working during the coronavirus pandemic—including 26% who are very satisfied— while only 28% are dissatisfied. Satisfaction transcends partisan affiliation, with 64% of self-described Democrats, 69% of independents, and 80% of Republicans expressing satisfaction.

That said, McDermott noted that the findings indicate that the crisis may be driving more Americans to support a government-run health care system. That’s because respondents also expressed support for guaranteed quality health care for all Americans, those infected with the coronavirus, and other groups, regardless of party affiliation. Support for access to quality care regardless of citizenship status was also high.

McDermott said the poll results were by and large in line with what the class expected.

“We found them interesting, just to see how people were coping, and in some ways it was nice to see that people were coping, that they had adjusted, they were following the rules, doing what was advised, and just surviving as Americans,” she said.

On the other hand, the experience the class had is unlikely to ever be replicated.

“Coming up with questionnaires is the most labor-intensive part of polling. Designing questions in a way that you get the answers that accurately measure people’s true attitudes and behaviors is one of the harder things to learn in polling,” she said.

“Going through that with the students was in way, a really special semester, because they got to go through it twice with two different surveys.”

]]>
135650
New Certificate Program to Offer Expertise in Polling https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/new-certificate-to-offer-expertise-in-polling/ Wed, 29 May 2019 20:40:32 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=120978 In the run up to national elections, not a day goes by when a poll is not released, analyzed, and pored over by pundits, news anchors, and ordinary citizens eager to get a sense of where the country is headed.

This fall, Fordham’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences will offer students the opportunity to master polling’s unique blend of science and art with an advanced certificate in public opinion and survey research. The certificate, which is being offered through the Department of Political Science, is an extension of the Elections and Campaign Management master’s program.

Registration for the certificate program is currently open; students can complete it in a year with a full-time course load or in two years on a part-time basis. The curriculum comprises five courses: Introduction to Quantitative Analysis, Political Survey Research, American Political Behavior, Survey Research Data Analysis, and Public Opinion Certificate Practicum.

The last two courses have been created specifically for the certificate program.

For the practicum, students will be designing and analyzing a new annual survey, called the Fordham American Faith Poll.

Monika McDermott
Photo by Chris Taggart

Monika McDermott, Ph.D., professor of political science and director of the Elections and Campaign Management program, said the faith poll is what really distinguishes this certificate program from others that are similar.

“Each year, the students will decide exactly what the poll will be on, they will write the questions, it will be fielded by a professional calling house, and then the students will do data analysis, and we’ll release the results publicly,” she said.

“This certificate is designed to teach students a specific skillset, one that is useful in a whole range of fields.”

In addition to giving students hands-on experience creating, executing, and analyzing a poll, McDermott said the Fordham American Faith Poll will address an area of American life that she says has been overlooked by most pollsters today.

“Most polling is just horse race polling about politics, and doesn’t delve into the deep belief structures and aspects of American faith and culture that we’d like the poll to do,” she said.

That’s true even of the high-profile polls conducted by Monmouth University and Quinnipiac University, she said, which focus a great deal of time on the presidential race.

“This is going to be up to the students, but if it were to be about politics, it would probably be more about how Americans relate their faith to politics,” McDermott said.

“It could also be just about faith in Americans’ lives. How do Americans worship? How much do they worship? How important is it to them? These are questions we don’t really have in-depth answers to.”

McDermott acknowledged that the polling industry’s reputation took a bit of a hit when Donald Trump won the presidency in 2016, but she said it was undeserved. After all, she said, most polls had Hillary Clinton up by 2 to 3 percentage points, and in the end, she won the popular vote while losing the Electoral College. One thing she said students who earn this certificate will come away with is a better understanding of not only what polls can do, but what they can’t do.

“People like to use polls to predict things, when that’s not what polling is supposed to do. I think we’ve gotten so wrapped up in wanting to know what’s going to happen in an election that we expect polls to be a magical predictor,” she said.

“I teach students that polling is only of the moment. It only tells you what people are thinking when you ask your question, and their opinion could change tomorrow. It could change for very good reasons, or it could change for idiosyncratic reasons.”

Since courses such as Survey Research Data Analysis and Quantitative Analysis are not exclusively concerned with politics, McDermott said the certificate will also be of interest to anyone looking to work in market research and data analytics.

“There’s whole host of fields that want people who can measure public opinion. That’s what we’re looking to train students in,” she said.

“It’ll still have a focus on political polling just because it’s tied to the elections and campaigns management program, but it’s not going to be limited to that in any way.”

]]>
120978
Whitaker Porter, GSAS ’19: Looking to Build Bridges in a Divided Republic https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/2019/whitaker-porter-gsas19-looking-to-build-bridges-in-a-divided-republic/ Tue, 14 May 2019 21:02:09 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=120238 Whitaker Porter was torn. She was graduating from high school and planning to attend college in either Texas, an hour drive from her home city of New Orleans, or in the Bronx, a plane ride away.

She chose Fordham College at Rose Hill and never looked back.

“I knew I would be happy at either school, but I wanted something different for college. I wanted to branch out and I thought, ‘What better place than New York City?’”

Porter majored in political science and was so taken with it that she stayed on another year to earn a master’s in election and campaign management at the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. A member of the graduate student council, she will serve as the school’s beadle at commencement in May, though she’ll technically graduate in August.

An Interest in Polarization

Then it’s off to help alleviate the yawning partisan gap in U.S. politics. Inspired by classes such as Polarization in American Politics, which she took with professor Richard Fleisher, Ph.D., and informed by her own background growing up in a conservative area of the country, Porter hopes to find ways to bring Americans of different backgrounds together.

“The question at the end of our polarization class was, ‘What does this mean for our democracy? Is this detrimental?’ The answer was, not yet, but it really could be. That’s something that I think has really stayed with me,” she said.

“It sounds cliché to say, but I want to do something to bridge the gap between the parties. It gets really hard because you’re asking people to give up their beliefs to compromise, which isn’t gonna happen realistically. I think bipartisanship is understanding that there’s still partisanship involved, but you’re figuring out a way that it can work.”

She has no delusions about the challenges ahead. But research she’s conducted at Fordham has convinced her that some partisanship can be blamed on structural problems. In a paper she wrote about campaign finance laws, for instance, she found that a majority of Political Action Campaigns (PACs) are associated with corporations or membership and trade groups, and support centrist political positions. So the common perception that corporations and special interests are polarizing agents in politics today is not entirely accurate, she said. Individual donors, on the other hand, tend to reside at the ideological extremes, she noted. And those donors’ influence has grown in in recent years.

“We can see that candidates that position themselves further towards the extremes raise more money from individual contributors. So, limits on contributions change the types of donors that candidates can focus on and raise money from,” she said.

“Who candidates raise money from can effect which types of candidates get elected—either more centrist or more ideologically extreme. I’m trying to avoid a value judgment on which one is better, just trying to understand how the change can happen. It’s not about public policy. It’s about the rules and how they kind of shape what can happen in the public policy sphere.”

From the Theoretical to the Practical

If her undergraduate degree gave her a theoretical grounding, the master’s has given her practical training needed to work in the field. Porter has been interning at the political consulting firm the Advance Group this spring, and for her capstone project, her class is designing from scratch a political campaign for Martha McSally, the junior senator from Arizona. Voter profiles, polling questions, television scripts, a fundraising plan, phone banking—they’re designing all of it, using the knowledge they’ve learned from classes such as Survey Research, which is taught by Monika McDermott, Ph.D.

McDermott, who also taught Porter as an undergraduate, said she was an outstanding student, a fun person to have in class, and someone who was obviously actively thinking about the material being discussed.

“Whit’s got a passion for politics that is very important when you’re going into the political world, because it’s a really rough and tumble world and it’s not for the faint at heart,” she said.

“She’s got the sharp, and I would say, natural instincts of what works and what doesn’t in the political world. Some of that comes from learning, and some of it comes naturally. I think that’s what’s going to make her a success when she lands a job and starts working full time.”

Getting Ready for 2020

Porter’s not sure what she’ll do after graduation yet, but is attracted to consulting, for which there will likely be a great need as the 2020 presidential election approaches. Even if she doesn’t work directly with a 2020 presidential candidate, she anticipates that lower-level political races will also be affected, as voters tend to vote straight Democratic or Republican tickets, creating a coattail effect.

Moving to New York definitely prepared her to confront differing opinions, she said, and even caused her to change some of her own.

“I am not leaving Fordham with the same political beliefs I was brought up with. Coming to New York, you’re just opened up to an entirely different perspective and a different worldview,” she said.

“It’s interesting, because I can also see how people here have no idea what it’s like to grow up in the South, or in a place where conservative values are the norm, and it’s not always a bad thing. I feel like I have this really interesting perspective of both ideologies and how they’re so different. They kind of just shoot past each other without ever really intersecting.”

]]>
120238
Record Pollies for Poli Sci Students https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/record-pollies-for-poli-sci-students/ Fri, 24 Apr 2015 18:35:54 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=15040 Four graduate students in the University’s Elections and Campaign Management program have been awarded a total of five Student Pollie Awards from the American Association of Political Consultants (AAPC)—the highest honor bestowed by the association. The awards recognize excellence in political advertising and span several categories, including Best Television Ad, Best Radio Ad, and Best Website.

The Fordham students received Pollie Awards in more categories than any other program, outperforming other prestigious schools and campaign management programs–including the Graduate School of Political Management at George Washington University, the University at Akron, and the University of Florida.McCollum290 Fordham’s 2015 Pollie award recipients are:

  • Best Campaign Plan (Gold): Nicole Jaconetty
  • Best Fundraising Effort (Silver): Nicole Jaconetty
  • Best Use of Direct Mail (Gold): Dina Charchour:
  • Best Use of Television (Silver): Bryndís Ísfold Hlöðversdóttir
  • Best Use of Television (Bronze): Louis McDonald

Awarded annually by AAPC, the Pollies are one of the most prestigious awards in the political campaign and public affairs industry.

“We are so proud of our students,” said Costas Panagopoulos, PhD, professor of political science and director of the Master’s in Elections and Campaign Management program. “People work their entire professional careers in political advertising and never earn a Pollie,” he added. “To win [one]as a student is truly exceptional.”

Among the University projects recognized was a finance plan for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign and a fictional gubenatorial campaign. Nicole Jaconetty, a graduate student in Elections and Campaign Management program, and students Søren Dal Rasmussen, Elizabeth Dobbin, Carlos Hernández-Echevarría, Louis McDonald, Natalie Ryan, and Tiffany Smile created a campaign plan for a hypothetical Minnesota Governor’s race that was to take place in the fall of 2014, titled “McCollum for Governor 2014.” Dina Charchour’s Pollie was for her direct mail piece entitled “A Kentucky Tradition” relating to Alison Lundergan Grimes’ Senate race against Mitch McConnell.

 Students received their Pollie Awards at a ceremony in New Orleans, LA in March 2015.

— Janet Sassi

]]>
15040
What Motivates Voters? Political Scientist Peers into Voter Behavior https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/what-motivates-voters-political-scientist-peers-into-voter-behavior/ Tue, 14 Oct 2014 15:30:55 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=93 On Nov. 4, Americans will go to the polls to determine which of the two major parties will control Congress.
If the day turns out to be anything like traditional midterm elections, fewer than half of those eligible to cast a vote will actually do so (40 percent, according to the Pew Charitable Trust).

For Costas Panagopoulos, Ph.D., an expert on national elections, the million-dollar question that drives his research is, why?

Panagopoulos, a professor of political science and the director of Fordham’s Center for Electoral Politics and the Master’s Program in Elections and Campaign Management, specializes in the political psychology of voting behavior.

In two articles, “I’ve Got My Eyes on You: Implicit Social-Pressure Cues and Prosocial Behavior,” which appeared in the journal Political Psychology, and “Watchful Eyes: Implicit Observability Cues and Voting,” published recently in the journal Evolution & Human Behavior, Panagopoulos measured voter behavior in Key West, Florida, and Lexington, Kentucky, respectively.

Psychologists and evolutionary anthropologists long ago realized that if someone goes in intending to give blood and sees a poster in the room featuring a pair of eyes, he or she is more likely go through with it; the same is true for other public-spirited behaviors, such as littering less.

Why, Panagopoulos theorized, couldn’t that behavior model be applied to voting?

He found that those who receive a postcard reminding them to vote are more likely to do so if the card shows an image of a pair of eyes, as opposed to more generic images like an American flag or a palm tree. They’re also more likely to vote than someone who never receives a card at all.

“These findings reinforce the idea that people vote partly for the social implications, because they want to be perceived as individuals who support the democratic process. That is possibly a function of evolutionary mechanisms, where people evolved to care what others think of them,” Panagopoulos said.

“Those people, the argument goes, developed a reputation for being good citizens, and that helped them be less ostracized and be embraced by their communities.”

Are people voting because they’re afraid others will look down on them if they don’t vote? Or are they doing it because they want to feel good about fulfilling their civic duty? That’s still an open question.

“There’s much more work and research that needs to be done,” he said. “But at least for now, we’re finding consistent results that suggest people engage more frequently in pro-social behavior when they know that they’re being watched or there’s a possibility that they’re being monitored. Social pressure is a powerful motivator.”

Panagopoulos has also studied the effects of paying people to vote, and an article on his findings, “Extrinsic Rewards, Intrinsic Motivation and Voting,” was published in the Journal
of Politics.

The idea of paying people is not a new one. In 2006, Arizona legislators proposed entering voters into a lottery for a cash prize. It was rejected, but the idea was resurrected recently in Los Angeles.

In his research, Panagopoulos found that when incentives ranging from $1 or $2 to $10 to $25 were offered, there was a slight uptick in turnout. The lower amount had a marginal effect, whereas the $10 or $25 stimulated turnout by 3 to 7 percentage points.

“We’re learning a great deal about why people vote and engage in costly pro-social behaviors like voting,” Panagopoulos said.

“The more we know about the psychological mechanisms and the other forces behind why people decide to vote or to abstain, the more we can leverage that information.”

Panagopoulos is crafting field experiments related to campaign finance, as part of a nearly $1 million grant he secured last year from the Open Society Foundation and the Omidyar Network’s Democracy Fund. The experiments, which are collaborations with colleagues at Columbia and Binghamton universities, will measure perceptions of how money influences politics, and whether or not there’s a disproportionate influence of money on politicians and political outcomes.

Recent Supreme Court decisions in cases such as 2010’s Citizens United and this year’s McCutcheon v. FEC, have radically changed the ways that candidates pay for political campaigns. As a result, concerns about possible corruption are rising.

“Voters are somewhat torn,” Panagopoulos said. “On the one hand, they know campaigns are super expensive and have to be financed somehow. But at the same time, they want to make sure there are mechanisms in place to prevent corruption or even the appearance of corruption, and sustain the legitimacy of the democratic process.”

On Nov. 4th, he’ll be joining analysts at NBC News’ Decision Desk, as he has in every election cycle since 2006. As it is a midterm election, the fate of congressional control will be determined more than ever by sheer turnout numbers.

“Understanding the voter calculus is crucial, especially for those interested in mobilizing voters in low-turnout elections like these,” he said.

]]>
93
How Did the Pollsters Fare? https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/how-did-the-pollsters-fare/ Thu, 08 Nov 2012 21:11:24 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=41061 On Tuesday, President Barack Obama earned a second term in the White House with a clear victory in the Electoral College but only 50 percent of the popular vote. It’s a percentage that political scientists projected long before voters went to the polls, said Costas Panagopoulos, Ph.D., director of Fordham University’s Center for Electoral Politics and Democracy.

On Oct. 23, Panagopoulos discussed various presidential election-forecasting models and shared the latest polling data with a gathering of alumni and friends at the Hotel Sofitel. “2012: A Race Odyssey” marked the New York City debut of Fordham at the Forefront, a new series of events sponsored by the Office of Alumni Relations.

“The median forecast is an estimate of 50.6 percent for Obama, a very slight advantage for the president,” said Panagopoulos, assistant professor of political science at Fordham, and director of the University’s graduate program in elections and campaign management, “But depending on what states those votes are in could end up deciding the outcome of the election.”


Costas Panagopoulos, Ph.D.

Panagopoulos added: “Political scientists are actually quite good at predicting what will happen in presidential elections.”

(See what polling organization made the top of the list of Panagopoulos’ rankings of accuracy in pre-election polling.)

For the 2008 presidential election, nine out of 10 national forecasters predicted Obama winning the two-party popular vote. Alan Abramowitz, the Alben W. Barkley Professor of Political Science at Emory University, projected in his Time for a Change model that John McCain would get 45.7 percent of the two-party vote in 2008. “McCain ultimately got 46.3 percent of the major party vote,” said Panagopoulos. “[The model was] only off by half a percentage point.” In the 2012 forecasts, Abramowitz projected Obama winning 50.6 percent of the popular vote.

“Some of these models were estimated three, four months, sometimes almost up to a year before Election Day, before we even knew who the candidates were,” Panagopoulos said. “It may cause you to wonder if campaigns matter at all if you can come this close to predicting what’s going to happen long before the campaign unfolds.”

The Fordham at the Forefront series was launched on Oct. 1 in Atlanta, where Panagopoulos also spoke about the presidential debates and campaigns. More than 65 alumni attended the New York lecture and reception, representing nine out of Fordham’s 10 schools and colleges and a wide range of class years.

The Office of Alumni Relations intends to host several Forefront events throughout the year in the New York City metro area and around the country, highlighting Fordham faculty members’ expertise in such areas as trust in business, sustainability, and healthcare reform.

“Alumni will always be able to count on Fordham at the Forefront for an engaging presentation and discussion about things that matter in the world,” said Michael Griffin, assistant vice president for alumni relations. “We want to deliver lifelong learning to Fordham alumni and we want to demonstrate Fordham’s leadership in areas of universal significance.”

— Rachel Buttner

]]>
41061
Professors Discuss the ‘Hows’ and ‘Whys’ of Election 08 https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/professors-discuss-the-hows-and-whys-of-election-08/ Mon, 24 Nov 2008 21:48:36 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=33721 The November elections heralded big changes in American politics, and not just because of the new faces that will appear in political posts around the country, according to a panel of political experts that convened on Nov. 21 at Fordham College at Rose Hill.

The 2008 elections broke new ground in many areas, including fundraising, campaign finance, primary contests and race, the scholars said.

The Internet emerged as a strong force in the race and, in a way, was another winner in this election cycle, said Costas Panagopoulos, Ph.D., professor of political science and director of Fordham’s Center for Electoral Politics and Democracy.

“[The Internet] has really revolutionized the way we think about campaigns in the 21st century,” he said.

Four scholars participated in the event, the Fordham Forum on American Politics, which is run by the Department of Political Science and sponsored by the deans of Fordham College at Rose Hill and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. It was moderated by Richard Fleisher, Ph.D., a Fordham political science professor.

Panagopoulos said one loser of the race was the system of public financing for presidential campaigns, which Obama opted out of so he could rely on his own prodigious fundraising operation. “As it is now, it is basically defunct,” he said of the public financing system for presidential candidates.

The election also showed that racial attitudes are poised to play a greater role in future elections, said Monika McDermott, Ph.D., also a Fordham political science professor.

“We definitely haven’t moved past negative racial attitudes in America,” she said, describing how race cost Obama some votes among late-deciding swing voters and voters who cast their ballots for Democrat John Kerry in 2004.

“Not only was [race]hyperimportant, but it seems like it’s going to be ever more important in future elections,” she said.

The election was also notable for the insurgents that captured each major party’s nomination, said John Coleman, Ph.D., a political science professor at the University of Wisconsin.

Democrat Hillary Clinton started out as the better-organized candidate, but Barack Obama won through smart strategy, such as focusing on states where the nominee is chosen through a party caucuses rather than a public primary, Coleman said.

Clinton lacked a strong strategy for the caucus states, and Obama saw he could turn the tide in those states with relative ease, Coleman said.

“That’s where she lost the Democratic nomination,” he said.

Panagopoulos said Obama’s formidable fundraising doesn’t completely explain his victory. He noted the big financial advantage of one Republican contender, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who lost the nomination to Arizona Sen. John McCain.

“[The 2008 election] showed that there are limited conclusions that we can extract from who these front runners are,” he said.

William Mayer, Ph.D., of Northeastern University said the election was more a reflection on George W. Bush than on Barack Obama. “Voters took their anger out on the Republican Party” on Nov. 4 because Bush wasn’t on the ballot, he said.

Another Fordham political science professor, Jeffrey Cohen, Ph.D., said from the audience that the current economic crisis matters more to the fortunes of the two major parties than does any detailed analysis of their respective strengths and weaknesses.

“The country is in an economic catastrophe. That is going to subsume everything else,” he said. “We’re not going to have positional politics being played between the parties.

“The Democrats running government must prove that they can correct the economy, or their goose is cooked,” he said.

]]>
33721
Elections and Campaign Management Student Wins Industry Award https://now.fordham.edu/inside-fordham/elections-and-campaign-management-student-wins-industry-award/ Mon, 31 Mar 2008 18:38:53 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=14094 Robert Alberty, a graduate student in the Elections and Campaign Management program, has won a Student Pollie Award for Best Radio Ad from the American Association of Political Consultants (AAPC).

Titled “Where Will Tom Go Next?” Alberty’s ad was created during the “Strategies and Mechanisms of Political Communication” course taught last fall by veteran instructors and leading political strategists Joseph Mercurio and Bart Robbett. The ad contrasted U.S. Sen. Susan Collins’s perfect voting attendance record with that of her challenger, U.S. Rep. Tom Allen.

“I am so pleased by this honor, which would have been impossible without the training and encouragement I received from the instructors and my classmates in the campaign management program,” Alberty said. “This is exactly why I came to Fordham.”

Awarded annually by the AAPC, the Pollies are the most prestigious awards in the political campaign and public affairs industry. This is the first year the Pollies opened the competition to students in campaign management programs across the country.

“We are delighted that the AAPC has recognized Robert for his excellence in political advertising,” said Costas Panagopoulos, Ph.D., director of the program. “Robert exemplifies the high standard of excellence that students in the ECM program are trained to achieve, and we are very proud.”

Alberty received his award on March 15 at the AAPC’s annual conference in Santa Monica, Calif.

]]>
14094