Above and Beyond

October 19, 2017
A crowd stands watch at the US Capitol building on Innaguration day in 2017.

Capital Ideas

In the dawning days of 2017, students Phil Cranwell 鈥17, Will Ospina 鈥19, and Richard Pastrana 鈥16, 鈥17 M.S., journeyed to Washington, D.C. to witness the peaceful transition of power.

But seeing Donald Trump get sworn in as the 45th President of the United States wasn鈥檛 the real reason behind the trio鈥檚 Washington trip; it was just the finale to a rigorous two-week academic course load consisting of lectures, panel discussions, workshops, daily writings, nightly readings, and weekly essays鈥攁s well as regular bouts of lively, yet respectful, political discourse. Cranwell, Ospina, and Pastrana represented NJCU at the Washington Center鈥檚 Presidential Seminar, an annual event during which some of the finest college students from around the country converge on the nation鈥檚 capital

Each of the NJCU participants have demonstrated their political acumen on the University鈥檚 campus. Cranwell, who currently serves as a captain in the North Hudson Fire Department, is a Political Science major with plans to attendlaw school.

Ospina, who plans to become a teacher, is a dual major in Political Science and History. 鈥淚鈥檓 a big fan of both,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat I enjoy about both majors is that they piggyback off of each other. Whatever I learn in my history classes I can apply to my political science classes and whatever I learn in my political science classes I can apply to my history classes.鈥

Pastrana dual majored in Criminal Justice and Computer Science. After he graduated, he began pursuing his master鈥檚 degree in Criminal Science. Though his academic background is less politics-centered than his fellow seminar participants, he is no less politically focused; a member of the NJCU student government for four years, he served his final year as president of the senior class.

鈥淭his was the first year the Washington Center accepted criminal justice majors,鈥 Pastrana notes. 鈥淪o, I got lucky.鈥

Cranwell and Ospina knew each other before the seminar, working as a team in a Political Science course taught by Professor Fran Moran. Titled 鈥2016,鈥 the class focused on analyzing the 2016 election as it spooled out toward Election Day. Using forecasting models, Cranwell and Ospina鈥攗nlike most every pollster in the U.S.鈥攁lmost perfectly predicted Trump鈥檚 upset victory on a state-by-state basis.

鈥淲e looked at everything,鈥 remembers Cranwell. 鈥淎ll the numbers.鈥

Ospina finishes Cranwell鈥檚 thought: 鈥淎nd we were so accurate it was scary. We were only off by a state or two, but what we predicted is pretty much what happened.鈥

More than 300 students attended the seminar; all of them were gregarious classroom participants. 鈥淪ometimes, in a typical college classroom, a professor would ask a question and the students would be quiet,鈥 Ospina explains. 鈥淏ut at the Washington Seminar, hands flew up for everything. Everybody had something to say.鈥

Each day, guest speakers initiated a new topic of discussion: race, finances, immigration, health care. Each speaker鈥檚 personality provided a new energy dynamic鈥攆rom the relaxed analytical perspective of Steve Scully of CSPAN to the bolder, provocative rhetoric of author and radio host Michael Eric Dyson.

Each afternoon, the students were broken into small groups to take part in site visits around the city. In addition to museums, Cranwell, Ospina, and Pastrana visited various think tanks, the Capitol, and the broadcasting studios of C-SPAN.

鈥淚t was a real education,鈥 says Cranwell, 鈥淎t the Climate Institute, for example, they talked about building a solar infrastructure for this country. They explained how they were tailoring their arguments for the new administration, which is more focused on infrastructure than the environment.鈥

The trio also got a few unexpected encounters with elected officials. 鈥淲hen we saw [New Jersey Senator] Bob Menendez, we thought he might have a security detail but he didn鈥檛,鈥 Ospina says. 鈥淪o, we stopped him. Most of these guys are just happy to meet someone who is happy to meet them.鈥

And then came the Inauguration. A festive, if unsurprisingly partisan affair. 鈥淭he crowd booed and yelled, 鈥楲ock her up鈥 whenever the camera pointed in Hillary鈥檚 direction,鈥 Pastrana says. 鈥淧eople have the right to disagree, but I found it disrespectful.鈥

鈥淚 felt a little bad about it,鈥 Cranwell adds, 鈥渦ntil I saw a clip from 2009 when the crowd booed George W. Bush. So, I guess that鈥檚 just a thing that happens.鈥

In the end, the whirlwind trip to Washington provided levels of insight that far surpassed what can be gleaned from any news broadcast or magazine story. 鈥淭his was an incredible experience for a political junkie like me,鈥 Ospina says, wearing a wide smile. 鈥淚t was like Hollywood to a movie fan.鈥 NJCU

 
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