Specter sees loyal following at Penn
Penn for Specter says the senator’s party-hopping last April is a mark of courage, not cowardice
· February 24, 2010, 7:50 am
U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter speaks at Penn in October 2009. Penn for Specter hopes to propel him beyond his opponent in the Democratic primary, U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak.
When Penn for Specter president Graham White attended presentations on both U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter (D-Pa.) and U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak (D-Pa.) at a Penn Democrats meeting last fall, the College freshman chose to support Specter because he was impressed by the senator’s long record of helping Pennsylvania.
“Specter has the experience to get the change that Obama wants in Washington,” White said. “Sestak is more liberal, but I didn’t feel like he was experienced enough.”
White’s feelings toward Specter are typical among members of the student group. Despite Specter’s party switch last April, his student supporters say his independent-minded nature is one of his most important attributes.
“I understand that there’s a lot of blow-back that focuses on how he’s basically a turncoat,” College junior, Southeast Pennsylvania coordinator for Students for Specter and former Penn for Specter President Colin Kavanaugh said. “It was always my perspective that not only was he not [a turncoat], he was actually a real profile in courage when it came down to the stimulus vote.”
Wharton junior Michael Stratton, the Southeast Pennsylvania coordinator for Students for Specter, echoed this confidence in Specter’s ability to do the right thing.
“Initially I think many Democrats were somewhat uneasy with him as a candidate and him as a Democrat,” he said, but since then, those concerns have been eased as Specter has voted with Democrats on many issues.
Penn for Specter came together last fall after Kavanaugh, a former Daily Pennsylvanian reporter and columnist, began working for the Specter campaign.
Establishing the group meant “literally starting from scratch” to find members, but Kavanaugh said the process was helped by some interested students, like Stratton, who had connections on campus and in the area from previous campaigns.
When Specter held a town hall meeting on campus last October, students got to see that “in a smaller setting, like town halls, he’s actually a very funny person,” Kavanaugh said.
Randall Miller, a St. Joseph’s University history professor and political analyst, said support for Specter is common not just among Democratic students, but also with party voters across the state.
“Democrats don’t have to like Specter, and they don’t have to think he’s really true blue,” he said. “They just have to believe he will get the job done for them, and that’s basically what he’s saying he’ll do.”
He added that Specter still has some independent and Republican support because he has not just supported every Democratic policy since the switch.
“That’s always been his appeal,” Miller said. “He’s independent-minded, but also knows how to deliver the goods.”
White said while some members are very liberal Democrats and others are more moderate or centrist, he doesn’t know of any Republican students who have joined.
“Obviously Specter didn’t rub a lot of Republicans the right way when he switched parties,” Kavanaugh said. “There are some young Republicans that didn’t forgive him for the switch.”
Penn College Republicans Chairman Peter Devine, a Wharton senior, said most members of the conservative student group lost faith in Specter after he switched parties last spring “not because he’s a Democrat, but because he put himself over his party, and his reelection over … what he stands for.”
Pennsylvania’s primary doesn’t take place until May 18, so Penn for Specter has spent the spring semester recruiting more members. But in a few weeks, White said, the group will begin canvassing, phone-banking and organizing events in support of the candidate.





Comments (5)
tsk070
February 25, 2010, 3:56 pm
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This is one of the most biased articles I've seen recently. Does the DP have an ax to grind? Joe Sestak has just as loyal a following here at Penn, if not more so. Why don't we hear more about that? We Pennsylvania Democrats don't deserve to hold on to this seat if we nominate someone as unprincipled as Arlen Specter.
rosenstein
March 1, 2010, 2:24 am
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To tsk070,
Thank you for your comment. Please see this from the March 1 edition of the DP: http://thedp.com/article/sestak-students-get-name-out
Noah Rosenstein Online Managing Editor
Steve71
March 1, 2010, 9:24 am
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As a former DPer, I cannot understand how this story did not mention that Arlen Specter is a Phi Beta Kappa international relations graduate of the College class of 1951. (I support Sestak, but it is simply inexcusable for the DP not to cite any speaker's Penn connections.)
Steve Marmon C'71, WG'81
Atif Eric Gulab
May 5, 2010, 9:40 am
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Hi. I think Arlen Specter should be re-elected. He is a good man and a dedicated public servant.
QQQ12
June 8, 2010, 6:53 am
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