Young Elected Officials Network

This week People for the American Way hosted their Young Elected Officials Network conference in Little Rock, Arkansas. No, not because Bill and Hillary Clinton were hoping to lock the superdelegates in a room and placed a chip in the back of their necks. But because young elected officials are different from those regular ol elected officials.

More than 150 elected officials age 35 and under, descended upon the Clinton Library to share their experiences, policy initiatives and best practices, and build a lasting network with their fellow young elected officials from across the country.

My friend Jason Croucher, Councilman to Osage City, Kansas, was in attendance and it can be said that the conference had such an impact on him that it has changed his outlook on his position and on politics.

It can be said that Jason for all his youth and idealism was a fairly establishment kind of Democrat who only recently began to dabble in the internets.

With his iPod touch Jason sent me sporadic updates mostly saying how awesome it was.

Jason Update 8:

"Very standard campaign training but bent toward the specific issues, challenges and culture young people experience and understand first hand... The trainers were very outside the box. The best organized training i ever attended. Truly seamless."

Jason Update 6:

"This conference is exactly the sort of thing that you would love- dozens of your progressives all together out of a common desire to do good. It really is moving."

Of the lectures the most interesting to me was the one about new media. I think there is a huge disconnect between candidates and parties when it comes to bringing them to the internet, so I was curious how PFAW would conduct a lecture like this but further how young officials would connect with it.

Jason Update 2:

"They did a workshop on net stuff this morning that was pretty good. Saying it isn't enough just to have a web site, talked about using social networking and just treating it like any other kind of organizing. It wasn't great and was honestly over a lot of heads.

Something thats kind of surprising is that that young progressive electeds are pretty establishment in how they view politics- even though they all have facebook they don't think of it as a tool for campaigning."

One way in which young electeds are just like all the others.

Regardless, Jason told me it was new and original and certainly non-establishment. Jason said he was a minority in that respect, and that he understands "it" now. Clearly he's been converted him to our technology loving youthy ways.

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This seems to be a recurring theme

I've noticed that a lot of young electeds are more establishment than people may think. There is still a mindset among many aspiring young politicians that they have to do things the way the "grown-ups" do it in order to be taken seriously. Some even view members of the youth movement as the kiddie table of politics. I think that this is the best benefit of the YEON.

First off, most young officials that are willing to attend such a conference are not those that disavow their youth or the youth movement, and the organization builds and supports many that do fit the millennial style politics. Too often a young person gets elected and gets sucked into the establishment, forgetting the youth in the process. Sadly, the establishment is all about doing this, and try to exploit young electeds in dealing with those pesky youth.

As YEON builds in strength I see more and more young elected officials embracing the new generation instead of avoiding it.

Kevin Bondelli (AZ)
Southwest Region Director
Young Democrats of America
http://ydabondelli.wordpress.com
http://www.yda.org/blog

I totally agree. I think

I totally agree. I think the only reason that I didn't become an establishment personality is because I first worked for such a non-establishment candidate - and continued from there. But I know in our state its nothing but establishment and those that don't really confirm to that personality type are really questioned or shunned by the rest of the establishment because they don't belong.

So it can really hurt you if you're a candidate or you want to work in the state but you clearly don't have the same ideals. Then again - that manifests itself into a huge echo chamber and group think mentality. And I think that's why yo see such a small community of bloggers in the state, virtually no new media on behalf of candidates, and nothing that is outside the box in terms of organizing.