芭乐视频 is well represented in the current Oregon legislative session, thanks to the first-time elections of a Republican senator and a Democratic representative. One has a lengthy record of public service, and the other is just launching her career. Both say they had positive, even formative experiences at Pacific.
Sen. Dick Anderson 鈥72, R-Lincoln City, flipped the seat long held by retiring Democrat, Arnie Roblan. Wlnsvey Campos 鈥17, D-Aloha, filled a vacant seat in the Oregon House by nearly doubling the vote total of her Republican opponent in the November election. At 25, she is the youngest woman ever elected to the Oregon Legislature.
鈥淕enerational change here and across the country is desperately needed,鈥 she said in an email. 鈥淢y generation, and generations thereafter, have lived in a distinctly different United States than those prior 颅鈥 and the voices of young people are critical to passing bold policies and driving change.鈥
Civic engagement is a cornerstone of the Pacific curriculum, and Campos took it to heart. Jim Moore, associate professor in the Department of Politics and Government, and director of political outreach at the Tom McCall Center for Civic Engagement, said Campos was politically active as an undergraduate.
鈥淪he worked on campaigns, was part of College Dems, and focused on practical political issues in many of her papers,鈥 Moore said. 鈥淲lnsvey鈥檚 senior thesis was 鈥楪ive Me Your Tired, Your Poor, Your Huddled Masses: An Analysis of a Broken Immigration System.鈥欌
鈥淎s a participant in the College Democrats group,鈥 Campos said, 鈥淚 was given an insight of how politics works here in Oregon and was able to develop important connections to volunteer and work opportunities, and 鈥 of course 鈥 to community members. I firmly believe that courses I had the opportunity to take like, for example, the 'Suppression of Dissent' and 'Parties and Elections' increased my interest in electoral politics and social justice.鈥
Anderson, too, is going to Salem as an elected official for the first time. He has served as mayor and city councilor for Lincoln City, where he and his wife Sue (Eckard) Anderson 鈥73 retired after his career in the financial services industry. Dick and Sue met as students at Pacific.
鈥淚 had a great time there,鈥 he said in a telephone interview. 鈥淚t was a great education and a supportive community.鈥
At Pacific, he played soccer and football 鈥 as a fullback in both cases. After graduation, he and his wife moved around the West. When he ran for the State Senate, his campaign website said, it wasn鈥檛 because of personal aspiration, but a call of duty.
He said he feels the Oregon Coast is overlooked when Oregonians talk about the differences between rural and urban Oregon. Most people think of the territory east of the Cascades as rural, he said, but people on the Oregon Coast share many concerns and philosophies of rural Oregonians.
He knows he鈥檚 entering as part of a caucus that鈥檚 distinctly in the minority, and which has recently resorted to walkouts to stymy Democratic-led legislation.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 leave a debate if I don鈥檛 get my way,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淏ut I expect to be heard.鈥