Volume 68, Edition 4

Page 1

CURRENT The

Wednesday 11.2.16

American River College Sacramento, Calif. Vol. 68, Ed. 4

Not so presidential THE AMERICAN RIVER CURRENT’S 2016 ELECTION SPECIAL

IF THEY VOTE, MILLENNIALS HAVE THE POWER TO MAKE CHANGE

BERA, JONES ATTACK CONTROVERSIES IN ONLY DEBATE

By Justina Sharp

By Robert Hansesn

justinasharparc@gmail.com

hansenrobj@gmail.com

In a crowded classroom in Davies Hall, Steve and Susie Swatt, a former journalist and legislative aide, respectively, informed students about not just their place in the 2016 elections, but in California history. The Swatts are co-authors of a book on California politics called “Game Changers: Twelve Elections That Transformed California.” They travel the state educating students on the history of these elections, and their long termramifications, many of which are still being felt today. “The millennials can be hugely powerful if they get together,” said Steve in an interview after the class. “Get your friends together, get on social media and make a change.” Historically, due to a lack of education on the political and electoral process, young people have often held the opinion that their votes are unimportant. In this election though, the environment is changing. “There’s a level of engagement that hasn’t been there before,” said political science professor Tressa Tabares, whose class was present for the guest speakers. “People are more interested in the process.” With more tools to spread their thoughts than ever before, young people have the potential to change the face of the election. “There’s a myth that voting doesn’t matter or count,” said Tabares. “Don’t buy into that. That thought alone is the biggest hurdle.” For students in the Swatts’ audience, that myth has become more fact than fiction. “For my friends - those who aren’t going to vote because California is a blue state, and they think it doesn’t matter, what do you tell them?” asked Rachel Davis, an ARC student. This is a question that has echoed through not just the halls of ARC, but the minds of Californians for decades. “If you don’t (vote), you don’t

Congressman Ami Bera and Sheriff Scott Jones squared off in their only debate over the hotly contested 7th Congressional District in KVIE studios in Natomas on Oct. 18, three weeks before election day. The moderators held no punches, asking Jones about recent allegations surrounding a 26-year-old deputy who claimed 30 inappropriate encounters occurred from 2003 to 2005 while she worked in the county jail’s law library. “Well yeah she is lying,” Jones said. “These allegations first came to light in any form about a year ago, for conduct allegedly occurring about 13 years ago. I went under oath and denied the allegations in the strongest terms possible.” Bera said that no woman should ever have to face this type of harassment, and that Jones’ actions were unacceptable. “It’s pretty disturbing,” Bera said. “We don’t have to guess what happened, this came out in a lawsuit. A jury didn’t believe you, they didn’t believe your leadership, and they ruled against you. It’s pretty shocking, I don’t believe you.” Bera then had his turn under fire as he was asked whether or not he had any knowledge of the illegal contributions his father made in previous election cycles. Bera’s father pleaded guilty to campaign fraud in May and was sentenced to a year in federal prison in Aug. “Look my father made a mistake and he shouldn’t have done this,” Bera said. He’s not a criminal but he broke the law.” “When I first heard about it I was shocked,” Bera said. That’s why we fully cooperated with the U.S. attorney. You know, if my dad actually just reached out and said something to the campaign or even me we would have said ‘dad, you can’t do this.’” Jones said that, especially in light of who is being let out of

Voting | Page X

Debate | Page 2

For more ARC coverage, go to www.arcurrent.com

INDEX

2-3 Election 5-6 4 News 7

@ARCurrent

A&C Sports

8-9 Scene 10-11 Opinion

@ARCurrent

FOOTBALL PAGE 7

/ARCurrentcom ARC cruises past Feather River to a 7-1 overall record and now ranks first in NorCal and second in the state.


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