Thousands of Liberty students registered
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Christa Desrets and Ray Reed
Published: October 8, 2008
Liberty University submitted more than 4,200 completed voter registration forms to the Lynchburg City Registrar on Monday, the deadline to register to vote in November’s election.
“We were pleased with the final tally,” Chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr. said Wednesday. Including an estimated 2,000 students who already were registered to vote locally, “that puts us in that 50- to 75-percent range that I was hoping for (out of Liberty’s potentially eligible 10,500 students).”
Last month, Falwell made an unprecedented call for students to vote locally, and announced that the school would cancel most classes on Election Day and provide bus transportation to the polls.
Larry Provost, director of commuter affairs, said that about two-thirds of the applications came from students living in dormitories who would vote at the Heritage Elementary School precinct. The remaining applications were from students who live off campus.
Before the Liberty surge, the Heritage Elementary precinct had about 1,900 registered voters, said Lynchburg voter Registrar Patricia Bower.
As of Wednesday morning, the Heritage number stood at 4,663, and counting.
“I think we can say at least 95 percent of that is Liberty-related,” Bower said.
Bower described the pile of Liberty applications as “several inches” high and said it probably would take the rest of the week to enter them in the computer system.
“That’s probably close,” Bower said of Liberty’s count of 4,200 applications.
“I don’t know how many we still have” to process, she said.
Several applications came in Monday afternoon just before the deadline for registering, and other applications came in Tuesday’s mail with postmarks from the day before, she said.
Bower said there was no way to separate the off-campus student applications from the ones generated by other voter-registration drives in Lynchburg.
Bower said those signups, conducted by door-to-door canvassers and at public gatherings, helped shorten the last-minute registration line at her office Monday. “It wasn’t long and out the door like we had in 2004” for the presidential election, she said.
Bower said that four to five volunteers plus three staff members were working with the applications.
One of those staffers was handling the task of calling and coordinating volunteers, some of whom were Liberty students, Bower said.
The majority of Liberty’s applicants were first-time voters, Provost said.
Liberty gained national media attention after Falwell’s announcement last month that it would distribute voter registration forms by the thousands in dorms and classrooms.
“That was amazing,” he said. “We had a TV crew from France, one from Norway in convocation Monday; we did an interview with the Wall Street Journal on Monday.”
He said the school plans to continue to push students to vote locally in future elections.
“If there are other colleges that have been doing this, they just haven’t gotten the attention,” he said. “It probably will catch on in the future.”
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Reader Reactions
Posted by ( luv2bliberal ) on October 09, 2008 at 2:48 pm
I hope Jerry Jr. DOES take over Lynchburg. No indication that he does, but if he grows the city the way he grew the university, more power to him. The only thing city council seems to agree on is a dog park so that they have a place to take a dump!
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Posted by ( In The Middle ) on October 09, 2008 at 1:56 pm
There is one BIG difference. No where else (except possibly Salt Lake City which also has a huge mountaintop logo) do college leaders try to take over the community in which they are located. Most colleges/universities strive to teach their students how to think, not to make academic and religious robots out of them.
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Posted by ( Drahcir ) on October 09, 2008 at 1:48 pm
Jim Crow is alive and well in LYNCHburg!
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Posted by ( Martha ) on October 09, 2008 at 1:39 pm
Veritas,
My daughter attended Mary Washington College ( now Univ. of Mary Washington) in Fredericksburg, VA. She never failed to vote, not once. But her votes weren’t cast in Fredericksburg they were absentee ballots cast in Lynchburg. She was never denied the right to vote and had a vested interest in voting in her home city.It was not difficult. Plus she didn’t have time to be too worried about Fredericksburg and the laws there becasue she was very busy studying and working hard on her degree.MWC was a more progressive College where ideas and curiosity were encouraged and the student body was not single-minded. There were College Republicans, Young Democrats, atheists, holy rollers, elitists, red necks, lesbians, gay guys, partiers and academics… YOU NAME it…what a great mix of students!She was not TOLD to register to vote by professors in each and every class, she registered to vote in high school and continues to vote now!
While I think voting is the most important civic first step an 18 year old can take I am sure that there are issues being contested in students’home cities that could require LU students’attention also.
State laws could change as a result of what LU has done. I have no idea what the impact will be for Lynchburg but as for VA as a state…it may well turn blue. Falwell and LU may reap what they have sown.How will the Gen. assembly look upon LU and Falwell when it is in the complete control of Dems?
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Posted by ( NAreader ) on October 09, 2008 at 1:25 pm
People, college students voting in their campus town isn’t a ‘LU’ thing, it is a NATIONAL INITIATIVE from sea to shining sea. Google ‘Campus Vote Initiative’, ‘Campus Compact’, etc. and you’ll find schools in every demographic from large-liberal to small-conservative. Students LIVE 10 of 12 months annually for 4 years in a community, some attend summer classes. They are physically residents who spend a lot of $$ on their campus and around the town. That means they are generating tax dollars for the municipalities. They LIVE there and they should have a say in their community… Regardless of how they vote. Here’s one site but there are many: http://www.compact.org/vote/
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Posted by ( veritas ) on October 09, 2008 at 1:02 pm
Bless your heart, Puffin.
You missed my point. My point was that if LC, Randolph, or even VUL were able to get 4200 voters registered, there would be little doubt as to which way the votes would swing…and there’s also little doubt that the liberal members on council would seek to capitalize on the opportunity.
All I was saying is that it’s hypocritical for everybody to fuss and moan about LU voters helping conservatives.
You can also stop using the money sign whenever you type out “Falwell.“ We get it. You don’t like them.
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Posted by ( Puffin ) on October 09, 2008 at 12:57 pm
That would never happen - because LC, Sweet Briar, Randolph etc. are not church-Falwell$-controlled and their teachers/administrators to not try to brainwash their students.
Vi-va OBAMA!
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Posted by ( veritas ) on October 09, 2008 at 12:55 pm
The sad thing is that most of the negative comments in this forum would be the exact opposite if this article detailed the registration of 4200 Lynchburg College voters.
It’s a little hypocritical to be railing against conservative voters when you know good and well that you would love it if the shoe were on the other foot.
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Posted by ( Rider ) on October 09, 2008 at 11:29 am
It’s time to change the law in Virginia. We need to tighten the requirements for voting in this state.
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Posted by ( bigjimm ) on October 09, 2008 at 10:44 am
Karen
Hang onto that lovely innocence, I’m sure it will work out for you.
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