Monday, November 25, 2013

Documented Progress

This Times Magazine Folder is one I was given from Congressman McCaul's office. The item  from my placement signifies the large amounts of current events that we were required to know at our placement, as well as the extensive work we did to clip articles from the paper that concerned Congressman McCaul. It was one of many similar articles held at the office.
This folder is one that I was given from Congressman McCaul's Office.  This item from my placement signifies the extensive amount of paperwork and filing that I did while at the office. These types of folders were common place in this line of work.


Monday, November 11, 2013

Title Page

Peter Driscoll

Congressman Michael McCaul

Politics

Congressional Office District District 10, Austin, TX

Peter V. Driscoll
8415 Bigview Dr. (512) 769-4141
Austin Tx 78731 patardriscoll@gmail.com

HIGHER EDUCATION GOALS
I wish to gain knowledge in the field of politics science and business.

EDUCATION
Current:  Westlake High School (WHS) (Austin, TX), Expected Graduation Date, 5/2014
This year I am taking 4 AP courses and a internship program, under Congressman Michael McCaul.
My Current Weighted GPA is a 100

ATHLETICS AND EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES
2010 Tennis  (WHS)

2011 Tennis  (WHS)
Debate Competitions (WHS)

2012 Tennis (WHS)
Debate Club (WHS)
Junior Statesmen of America (WHS)
Philosophy Club (WHS)
Competitive Rowing (WHS)
GOALS
I hope aspire to enter the political arena and change the world around me in a positive and meaningful way.










Monday, November 4, 2013

Product

My product will be a comparative political product. This product will focus on the comparative politics of different U.S. states and how that correlates with their recent economic activity. This product is an example of compiling comprehensive demographic data and turning it into something meaningful. These types of products are of high value in the political world, for they are used to model elections and analyze greater voter trends. More specifically this kind of model is used to generate political theories and hypothesis.

Annotated Bibliographies

Annotated Bibliography # 1



Annotated Bibliography # 2


Annotated Bibliography #3
Norquist, Grover. "POLITICO Magazine." POLITICO Magazine. N.p., n.d. Web. 25 Nov. 2013.

This article was one concerning the differences in ax approaches by Virginia and North Carolina.  In the article, Virginia was portrayed as having a bad approach to tax reform. The approach was portrayed negatively because taxes were raised. North Carolina was contrasted as having a better approach to tax reform.  This reform was portrayed positively because income, corporate, and death taxes were reduced or totally eliminated.  The North Carolina tax reforms were also backed by public opinion, while the Virginia increase in taxes was relatively unpopular.  I believe that the article is heavily biased towards a conservative economic argument. I did not agree with many of its premises, personally I feel liked raising taxes can be very beneficial to the economy in the long run by balancing the budget. I found the overall analysis to be very inaccurate with other works in this field. 


A Tale of Two Purple States

By GROVER G. NORQUIST and PATRICK GLEASON November 24, 2013
Republican and Democratic strategists are anxiously awaiting the final results of the excruciatingly close Virginia attorney general’s race, where votes are still being counted. Republicans are already dejected about losing the governor’s mansion in Richmond, and giving up the AG spot would mean that every statewide office in Virginia is now held by a Democrat for the first time in four decades. But the GOP should take heart and learn an important lesson heading into 2014 by comparing its failure in the Old Dominion to what has transpired in neighboring North Carolina, another battleground state that, politically, shares Virginia’s reddish-purple hue.
The Virginia GOP’s problems are largely of its own making. Outgoing Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell tarnished the Republican brand in his state and destroyed the party’s advantage on the tax issue earlier this year when he put his signature on a bill that raised taxes by $5.9 billion. Terry McAuliffe, his successor, made his support for McDonnell’s tax hike a key component of his message. Let’s just say that if you are a Republican and Terry McAuliffe is running on your tax plan, it’s a safe bet that it was probably a bad idea. Not only was McDonnell’s tax package dumb politics—a Roanoke College poll on the proposal found 49 percent opposed and only 33 percent supportive—it was terrible policy to boot.
Republicans in North Carolina went in the opposite direction, passing a historic tax reform package that included the largest income tax rate reduction in the country in 2013. The legislation dropped the top personal income tax rate by 25 percent, taking it from 7.75 percent, previously the highest rate in the Southeast, to 5.75 percent and flattening what had been a progressive income tax system. The Tar Heel State’s tax reform also reduced the corporate tax rate from 6.9 percent to 5 percent (eventually down to 3 percent, if revenue targets are met) and eliminated North Carolina’s death tax, making Pinehurst and the Outer Banks even more attractive to retirees from around the country.

According to a poll released by Americans for Prosperity earlier this month, 60 percent of North Carolina voters approve of the corporate tax rate reduction, and 70 percent approve of the lowering and flattening of the state personal income tax. It appears that the North Carolina tax reform package wasn’t just excellent policy, it was good politics—a reverse McDonnell, if you will. So not only is North Carolina’s BBQ superior to Virginia’s, so are its Republican politicians.


“Meanwhile, back in the Commonwealth, when McDonnell wasn’t raising taxes, he was grabbing headlines for vaginal wand mandates and receiving perhaps legal, but shady gifts from financial backers.
In 2010, Republicans took over the North Carolina Legislature for the first time in more than a century. Since then, the New York Times editorial board and other left-wing critics have tried to paint them as a bunch of troglodytes turning the state into a backwater. Despite sneers from Manhattan, it is clear that North Carolina voters are satisfied with how Republicans have turned the state around after more than a decade of high tax-and-spend policies under Democrats.
After spending their first two years in power blocking Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue from imposing a second round of tax hikes in addition to the $3 billion in higher taxes she signed into law shortly after taking office in 2009, North Carolina voters issued a vote of confidence in Republicans by increasing their legislative majorities in 2012, a year in which President Barack Obama was on the ballot, the Democratic National Convention was held in Charlotte and the party’s turnout machine was in full force. Amid a bad year for the GOP nationally, Republicans in North Carolina walked away from 2012 with control of the governorship and supermajorities in both chambers of the state legislature.
If North Carolina Speaker Thom Tillis, now a candidate for U.S. Senate, wins the Republican nomination to run against Sen. Kay Hagan (D-N.C.) next year, it will make for quite the contrast. His signature legislative achievement, the aforementioned tax reform, is very popular among North Carolina voters, while Hagan’s most prominent Senate vote, the one she cast for Obamacare, is extremely unpopular back home.
Republicans trying to learn lessons from the 2013 elections and past mistakes would be wise to take a long look at the difference in how Republicans have behaved in Virginia and North Carolina in recent years, then examine the contrast in the electoral outcomes that followed.”
Grover Norquist is president of Americans for Tax Reform. Patrick Gleason is ATR’s director of state affairs.







Interviews

Interview # 1



Contact Information

Jennifer Grammar

Fundraiser

Political Consultant

Texas Association of Broadcasters

592 e 11th street

Austin, TX, 78701

512-461-4964

1.) What college did you attend and what was your major? I attended the University of Texas at Austin and majored in Business.

2.) What was your first job out of college? Fundraising for governor perry

3.) How long have you been at your current job? I have been a fundraiser for 5 years and had my own political consultant company for 2 years.

4.) What motivated you to start in politics? A bad economy and job opening on the Rick Perry campaign for governor.

6.) How did you get your current job as a political consultant? I was in an internship at Rick Perry's office when I was hired by his campaign. I was refereed to the internship by a friend of mine at UT.

7.) As apolitical consultant, do you ever have to advocate for causes you don't believe in? Not really because I work a different part of the campaign. As a political consultant I fundraise and don't deal with the policy side of it.

8.) What activities would you recommend to me to enter politics? Internships at campaigns and meeting the right people

9.) How important were the connections you made in college? A friend of mine got a job with the Coryn campaign, and she talked to the the perry campaign and set me up for an interview.

10.) How long do you plan to stay in the career and what is you next step? Indefinitely, although i have been a political consultant company for 5 years every year has been different. My resume looks like i have hopped all around even though I have been at the same company.

11.) What do you look for in a resume? Previous work experience, quantifiable goals, I raised x amount of money, grew a team from here to here, I started here and ended up here.

12.) What is the greatest challenge of your job? Planning your time and prioritizing, changing schedules, dealing with upset donors

13.) Are y'all on watch for a Ted Cruz upset? Yes that is something we are on lookout for. You dont want to take anything for granted. There are rumors that medina will start a campaign that would take votes from our campaign, and she would be completely funded by the democrats.


14.) What do you do as a lobbyist? Fundraising


15.) What was it like when rick perry forgot the 3rd department of government he would eliminate? We put our heads in our hands and started
packing our things.

Reflection:

This interview was informative and insightful in many ways. It gave me a much deeper look into a side of the political world I have never seen; the campaign side. I learned from jennifer about the peculiarities of running successful political campaigns. She shared with me a route very different from the one I was planning. Jennifer informed me that her major in business has helped her in more ways than one. She told me it has given her a distinct

Interview # 2

1.) What college did you attend and what was your major? I attended the University of Texas at Austin and majored in Corporate Communications.

2.) What was your first job out of college? I was a recruiter for an accounting & finance firm. (Corporate Search Partners)

3.) How long have you been at your current job? I started working for Congressman McCaul in 2009. I started on the campaign side as his fundraiser, then became his district scheduler in the congressional office, and now I am a constituent liaison.

4.) What motivated you to start in politics? In college I interned for the Texas legislative council and then for a political fundraiser. After that experience, I knew that I wanted to be in politics at some capacity. I worked for several years in the private sector and then moved in to the public sector.

5.) When did you know you wanted to be in politics? Not until college. And I was interested in the campaign side at first. Not the policy side.

6.) How did you hear about and get your job as a constituent liaison? When the position opened up, I decided to take a chance as a constituent liaison since it was something I hadn't done in politics. Also, this position is more structured then most positions working for an official, which is what I needed since I have two young boys.

7.) Do you plan on staying in this career for a long time? I hope so, but when you work for a congressman you never know how long he or she will be in office. They go up for re-election every 2 years.

8.) What activities would you recommend to me to enter politics? I would get involved in the young republican's club (or democratic club) in college. And also get involved in student government. Possibly run for some sort of office. Many politicians got their start and experience by getting involved in student government in college. If you attend UT, then you can also do internships at the State Capitol which I highly recommend.

9.) What skills do you need to succeed as a constituent liaison? Customer Service is key! If I treat a constituent poorly, then that reflects poorly on Congressman McCaul and the individual thinks negatively of him. But if I do a good job and treat the constituent favorably, then that reflects favorably on Congressman McCaul and the constituent thinks positively of him.

10.) What is it like working for Congressman McCaul? It is great! I don't interact with him as much as I used to when I was his scheduler, but I love working for him and getting to help people in my current position.

11.) What do you look for in a resume? For interns, I don't expect to see a lot of past experience. But I can tell you that I don't want to see grammatical mistakes. And most companies feel the same way. Some of my past employers have thrown out resumes when they saw grammatical mistakes.

12.) What is the greatest challenge of your job? Getting too involved in cases. You want to be able to help everyone, but sometimes you just can't. I worked several cases for constituents trying to get their relatives out of Syria, and there was nothing our office could do to assist them. Grown men were crying to me, begging that we help them. It was really heartbreaking.

Reflection: The interview was informative in many ways. I was able to gain a greater understanding of what it is like to work in a Congressman's office. I also gained insight as to what career I should persue to further my goals.

Interview #3

Contact Information

Oscar Zyambrano 

Translator

Former Bush Speech Writer

Philadelphia Civil Court

297 Hall Street
‪Philadelphia, PA 19147

646-831-5863


1.) What college did you attend and what was your major? I attended the University of Pennsylvania  

2.) What was your first job out of college? Working at a convenience store called Wawa

3.) How long have you been at your current job? I have been a translator for 3 years.

4.) What motivated you to start in politics? A bad economy and an opening at my local court

6.) How did you get your current job as a translator? A former colleague from the Bush Administration referred me

7.) Do you ever come across arguments you dont agree with and dont want to translate? Yes, however it is my job to let their voice be heard in Court and I do it willingly

8.) What activities would you recommend to me to enter into law and politics? Internships at courts and meeting the right people

9.) How important were the connections you made in college? They were crucial for me finding my job on the Bush Campaign

10.) How long do you plan to stay in the career and what is you next step? Indefinitely, although i have been a translator for 3 years every year has been different.

11.) What do you look for in a resume? Experience in your field of study

12.) What is the greatest challenge of your job? Making the most of my time given and managing my different priorities

14.) What did you do for the Bush Campaign? I wrote a speech for him that was to be delivered to a Hispanic audience

15.) Were you nervous when writing the speech? Yes I was very stressed in the process but confident I could articulate his beliefs

Reflection:

This interview was informative and insightful in many ways. It gave me a much deeper look into a side of the legal world I have never seen. I learned from Oscar about the peculiarities of work with the U.S. Judicial system. He shared with me a route very different from the one I was planning. I find writing speechs to be particularly enjoyable and I hope to someday gain experience in this field. Also, work with the courts, either as a translator, speechwriter, or lawyer, is a common stepping-stone into politics.