MURFREESBORO — Curious about the hottest midterm Congressional races around the
country and what effect they could have on our nation?
Count on MTSU's
newest campaign analysts — students enrolled in Kent Syler's special midterm
elections course — to give you the answers Tuesday, Oct. 28.
Students in the
interdisciplinary course, "Advertising, Communications and Strategy in the
2014 Midterm Election," will offer critiques on 11 U.S. Senate and House
races beginning at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 28 in Room S-328 of MTSU's Business and
Aerospace Building.
Syler and the
students are encouraging the public to attend. A searchable campus map with
parking notes is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParking14-15.
"We have 22
students in 11 teams, and they're each responsible for being experts on a
particular Senate and House race," Syler said of the class, which is
serving political science, sociology and journalism
majors.
"We've been
discussing national strategies for this midterm election — how the GOP is
trying to nationalize the races and make them a referendum on Obama, and the
Democrats are trying to localize the races and focus on local issues. These
students are looking at polling, ads, the issues and changes from week to week,
and they're watching which races really have been heating up."
The presentations will be
succinct and will include clips of campaign ads, news coverage and more from
the races.
“There’s one race we’re
watching in Alaska that includes an ad with an X Games star attacking a
candidate for not looking like he knows what he’s doing on a snowmobile,” Syler
said with a laugh. “That is the first time I’ve ever seen that, definitely.”
The students will focus
on national issues that “everyone is talking about,” the professor added, and
they’ll explain the importance of state- and district-specific issues in other
areas with which Tennesseans may not be familiar.
Syler, an MTSU alumnus
who’s taught at the university since 2002, has been involved in politics for
more than 30 years. He managed former Congressman Bart Gordon’s 1984 campaign
and served as Gordon’s chief of staff from 1985 until Gordon retired in 2011.
He’s also served as a
political analyst for Nashville media for several years and will be offering
commentary on the Nov. 4 elections for WSMV-Channel 4.
“I’ll be bringing these
students up to WSMV on election night, too, and they’ll be helping get the
election results to the live broadcast,” he said. “It’s a great and exciting
opportunity for them to be right in the middle of all the action and behind the
scenes as well.”
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