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US scientists take on Trump at the ballot box

Academics standing for election aim to stand up for evidence-based policymaking

Published on
July 3, 2017
Last updated
July 26, 2017
US Capitol

Patrick Madden has taught and conducted research in computer science for nearly 20 years at Binghamton University, State University of New York. Were the political situation any different in Washington, he said he would be happy to continue doing just that. Instead, he鈥檚 running for US Congress in New York鈥檚 22nd District.

鈥淭he last few years, the political debate has been separated from reality where politicians can say nearly anything. It doesn鈥檛 matter if it鈥檚 true or false. People don鈥檛 even bat an eye,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 going to do my best to haul the discussion back towards reality.鈥

Professor Madden is just one of a handful of scientists jumping into unfamiliar territory by launching campaigns for elected office. Organisations working with those candidates hope to field a small wave of scientist candidates across the country in response to an administration and Congress that they say have disregarded science to an unprecedented degree.

Scientists, academics and medical professionals have been wary of President Trump since his campaign was still a White House long shot and he was calling global warming a hoax perpetrated by the Chinese government. But since his election victory, his approach to science has continued to聽alarm scientists聽and others concerned with evidence-based policy making 鈥 from key cabinet appointments to聽muzzling of聽scientists聽in some federal agencies and huge cuts to research funding in the聽White House聽budget. For many, the dangerous decision-making culminated in Trump鈥檚 announcement that he would withdraw the US from the Paris climate accords.

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Frustrations with the administration helped to spur one of the largest ever protests in support of science 鈥 the聽March for Science聽in April. That event helped get many campus-based researchers and students of science out of the classroom and into the streets. It also connected many with tools and training to better communicate the value of science to the general public.

Even before the march, however, some organisers were working to find candidates with science backgrounds to run for office. Perhaps the most prominent of those groups is 314 Action, a non-profit organisation that splits its resources between electoral politics and pro-science advocacy.

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鈥淭he joke that I tell is we鈥檙e like Emily鈥檚 List for nerds,鈥 said Ted Bordelon, the national spokesman for 314, referring to the political action committee that supports pro-choice Democratic female candidates.

Mr Bordelon said that 314 recruits and trains candidates with any kind of background in a science, technology, engineering or mathematics field, from a bachelor of science to a PhD. The group has had about 6,000 individuals participate in candidate training across the country through online webinars and in-person events.

Professor Madden is among the candidates working with 314. Others are running for everything from school boards to Congress.

In California鈥檚 48th Congressional District, stem cell researcher聽Hans Keirstead聽announced plans this summer to run as a Democrat against Republican incumbent Dana Rohrabacher, a noted聽sceptic聽of the scientific consensus on climate change. Volcanologist聽Jess Phoenix聽is running against Republican Steve Knight in California鈥檚 25th District.

And Lamar Smith, the Republican chair of the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology, has drawn an opponent in Texas鈥檚 21st District seeking to make hay of Smith鈥檚 anti-science views. While not a scientist himself, Democrat Derrick Crowe has worked as an organiser on climate change in Texas and described himself to聽聽as an 鈥渦nabashed nerd and unapologetic advocate for science and reason.鈥

Mr Smith, meanwhile, has made enemies of prominent scientists such as Michael Mann, director of the Earth System Science Center at Pennsylvania State University. Smith responded to a paper on climate change from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration by聽issuing a subpoena to the director of the agency. Mr Smith and Mr Rohrabacher are two of the incumbents being targeted by 314 in the next congressional campaign cycle.

Jason Westin, a Houston oncologist who leads a team of cancer researchers at the University of Texas M.聽D. Anderson Cancer Center, said that he had not planned to run for office before last November鈥檚 election. But Dr Westin, who worked on healthcare policy in the Senate before going to medical school, said that he鈥檚 seen traditional respect for science come under attack by the current administration. He鈥檚 one of several Democrats running to challenge Republican Representative John Culberson in Texas鈥檚 Seventh Congressional District,聽one of two seats聽in the state that Democrats plan to target next year.

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鈥淲e need people who understand science, need people who understand the consequences of disrespect for science to stop complaining and do something,鈥 Westin said.

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As chair of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice and Science, Culberson has frequently聽overridden聽the judgment of Nasa leadership. He has also criticised the Environmental Protection Agency and cast doubt on the science of climate change 鈥 two issues where Dr Westin said he would seek to draw a contrast with the incumbent in his campaign.

He also said that the proposed cuts to the National Institutes of Health in the White House budget would have a huge effect on the district.

鈥淚f we don鈥檛 get grants to labs, those jobs are gone,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese are not academic points that don't have any real-life practicality. These are things that have a real impact on the local economy and are key for vibrant societies.鈥

Rush Holt, the president and CEO of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, said that he gets phone calls every year from scientists considering a run for office. But Dr Holt, who taught physics before serving in the State Department and then Congress, said that he鈥檚 received more of those calls this year than any other.

鈥淭hey have the usual concern 鈥 can a scientist do it? And of course the answer is yes, no better or worse than anyone else can,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hich is to say it鈥檚 hard work for anybody and the odds are against you any time you try to break into politics. But it鈥檚 something I encourage scientists to do.鈥

Holt said that scientists have traditionally stayed out of politics, partly because they do not want to be seen as partisan. But increasingly their input has been ignored by lawmakers, he said.

鈥淲e鈥檇 be glad to see more scientists in office if that means science and scientific evidence are better integrated into legislation and policymaking,鈥 Holt said. 鈥淪ometimes it seems that the only way that that happens is by having trained scientists and engineers and friends of science in the policymaking process.鈥

This is an edited version of a story that聽.

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