Ryan Quinn ’18, a political analyst with SwingLeft, speaks on campus Sept. 19 about his experiences working on a Congressional campaign.

Alumnus shares lessons learned from the campaign trail

Looking at U.S. news coverage, there’s one thing that all media outlets seem to agree on: Our country’s divisions today are worse than they’ve been in a long time.

As a result, people are asking questions such as: How can we empathize with people who are different from us? And how can we listen to them, really understand them and help them to understand us?

These are some of the questions Ryan Quinn ’18 faces every day as a political analyst with SwingLeft, a New York City-based organization working to elect progressive candidates across the country.

And they’re the same questions he faced in 2018 as a worker on the campaign of Tracy Mitrano, J.D. ’95, who ran unsuccessfully for Congress in New York’s 23rd District against Republican incumbent Tom Reed.

Quinn visited campus Sept. 19 to talk about the experience of working on a local campaign and, more deeply, what he has learned about relating to people. He spoke as a guest of the Rural Humanities Initiative, a scholarly project funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation that is investigating the complex dynamics between rural and urban life.

Along with bringing speakers to campus, the initiative will offer a semesterlong seminar in the spring for advanced undergraduates and graduate students that will be a mix of theory and practice. It will also host an intensive Rural Humanities practicum for advanced undergraduates and graduate students.

Quinn, who grew up in San Francisco, said his experience with the 23rd District was a great introduction to the issues facing more rural areas.

“I knew I wanted to be a part of the midterms,” said Quinn, who majored in government and minored in international relations, and law and society. “I loved Ithaca and wanted to learn more about the area.”

Quinn discovered that the 23rd Congressional District is a mixture of various constituencies – post-industrial cities, rural agricultural communities and college towns, he said. The map looks like one blue square of Tompkins County, surrounded by 10 red counties, he said. But that’s missing a bigger picture, he said.

“When we paint everyone with a flat red or blue color, we alienate voters and fail to understand why they’re voting the way they are,” he said.

Some of the most important topics for people in New York’s rural areas – health care coverage and dairy farming subsidies – cross political lines. They became the top areas of focus for the Mitrano campaign, Quinn said.

“There is much more of America that looks like the 23rd District than we realize,” he said.

Quinn said his experience working on campaigns has taught him a lot about leading with empathy and the importance of having deep discussions with people to find out why they feel the way they do.

“It’s important to engage with ideas that may be uncomfortable to you,” he said, ”to open the door rather than shut it off entirely.”

Quinn, who now works on a national level to support progressive candidates, said his interest in government and politics emerged during his time at Cornell, when he realized he wanted a career with social impact, but didn’t want to follow the pre-med track he originally thought he might want to pursue.

“Interacting with policy and how political decisions change people’s lives became the most important things for me to study,” he said. “Through my humanities classes, I learned the skill of how to be intellectually challenged by an idea I had not previously considered. That has been really valuable in how I continue to think about issues.”

Kathy Hovis is a writer for the College of Arts and Sciences.

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