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thegazette Friday, March 14, 2014
Vollume 107, Issue 84
Meeting Matt Richard Raycraft NEWS EDITOR
âThanks Richard. And if anything else comes up today, donât hesitate to call me.â I hang up the phone puzzled. I had phoned Matt Helfand, a Western political science graduate student and former Social Science Studentsâ Council president, to get some background on a possible story lead involving the SSSC. What was going to come up that day that I would need to contact him again for? Three hours later, Helfand announced his candidacy for University Studentsâ Council president. The next day, he was on the front page. A couple of months and a campaign later, and he was the USC president-elect. âWhen I was about seven years old, I remember telling my mom âI want to be the first Jewish Prime Minister of Canada,ââ Helfand recalls. âBeing the first Jewish president of the USC is a pretty close realization of that goal to some smaller extent,â he says with a laugh. Even in an informal interview, Helfand exudes intensity. He speaks directly and concisely, immediately addressing questions â even joke ones like what animal heâd be (Dolphin) â with seriousness and depth. âMuch of what you saw during the campaign is really how he is,â says Emily Addison, Helfandâs running mate and vice-president internal-elect. âHeâs a bundle of energy and has a million ideas.â âHe gets very easily excited,â Dan Bain, his campaign manager, admits. Growing up in Toronto, Helfand never imagined he would end up where he is now. His twin brother Jesse, also a Western student, was the athletic half. That seemed to count for more in the early years. âI think that to some extent I would say
a level of friendly competition between me and my brother kind of spurred on some of the things that Iâm doing now,â Helfand says. âHe was always the athletic one, and in middle school and elementary school thatâs where the money is.â Helfandâs own strengths might not have counted for much among his childhood peers, but they were already beginning to show. His mother Judy Rapkin remembers his political nature becoming apparent early. âMatt was very similar to how he is now,â she remembers, while acknowledging differences from his twin brother. âHe loved to engage in arguments all the time, and he was always right.â âHe was a challenging kid for teachers because he was always right,â she continues, sarcasm evident in her tone. Rapkin remembers taking Matt, who was in second grade at the time, to a provincial riding debate. Matt asked a question to one of the candidates, which eventually turned into a war of words. âThis guy actually took him on, and [Matt] must have been seven or eight. It was bizarre,â she recalls. âIn the end Matthew and I left the room â Matthew in tears, but he had the confidence to do something like that.â âI definitely had these sorts of ambitions when I was younger, but I never had a way to realize them,â Helfand says. That chance would come with his enrollment in Western â the only school he applied to. Despite his obvious talent, the road to success in student politics wasnât easy. In Helfandâs second year, he made a plan to become SSSC president. Hoping to gain experience and knowledge as a councillor first, Helfand missed the all candidates meeting and was immediately disqualified from the election.
âI had to say to myself either put the plan on hold or skip to phase two [âŚ] I ran for [SSSC] president the next year,â he says. With no name recognition and experience, Helfand wasnât exactly a favourite. Campaign posters were ripped down, mistakes were made in debates. It all worked to motivate him ever more. âIt was an uphill battle, but it just sort of strengthened my resolve,â he says. Energy and communication skills paid off, and Helfand was elected SSSC president in his third year, serving in that role in his fourth. Despite speculation that he might run for USC president, Helfand took a pass and enrolled in graduate school in political science at Western. Soon, though, the political life came calling again. âMy life just felt stagnant,â Helfand says of life after the USC. âI didnât feel that there was anything fun that I was doing. I was just playing video games and not really enjoying myself.â Sitting in class one day, Helfand realized he might be able to run for president despite being a graduate student. Just like that, life wasnât so stagnant anymore. âI just jumped on it â at that moment it just clicked,â he remembers gleefully. âThat was the most exciting moment [âŚ] it was even more exciting than winning was.â Eligibility meant campaigning and reaching out, and thereâs nothing Helfand does, or loves, better. âWhen I got this opportunity to do the campaign it was just awesome to listen to other people and make connections with them and to try to come up with solutions to problems on campus,â he says. âItâs so dynamic â youâre on your feet a >> see HELFAND pg.3
Photography: Kelly Samuel GAZETTE