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February 17, 2010

UWSP student eyes Assembly seat


by Nick Paulson, Stevens Point Journal

Dustin Klein realizes some people aren't going to take his candidacy for the state Assembly seriously, but his run is no laughing matter.
"I'm not a typical candidate," Klein said. "But I am a very serious one."
Klein, a 19-year-old sophomore at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, is running for the 24th Assembly District, northwest of Milwaukee.
His candidacy is an uphill battle all the way, and Klein admits it will be tough. He is running against an incumbent, albeit one who is finishing up his first term. He is a Democrat running in a conservative-leaning district. By attending UWSP this spring, he will be living out of the district, although he said he could transfer to a school closer to the district if things are going well in the fall.
But these challenges don't mean his fight will be impossible to win.
"People who are young, students, have won various state offices," said Ed Miller, a UWSP political science professor.
Miller said Klein's two biggest challenges are facing an incumbent and raising enough money to defeat one. Incumbents, especially at the state level, typically must spend far less money to keep a seat than a challenger must to win one.
Dan Knodl, the district's incumbent assemblyman, is a 48-year-old businessman with plenty of ties in the community. He is a member of a number of area organizations and served as a Washington County supervisor for two years before being elected to the Assembly in 2008. Knodl did not return a call for comment.
For every question or problem raised, Klein said he has a plan.
His war chest is small, with about $1,000 raised since he filed his papers about a month ago. But he has begun creating relationships with "shared interests," groups he feels would support him, such as Fair Wisconsin or the League of Conservation Voters. He also is garnering support from county Democratic parties, in Waukesha county in particular. He hopes to gain the support of the Assembly Democratic Campaign Committee after the Sept. 14 primary.
"Traditionally, state assembly campaigns take about $100,000," Klein said. "We intend to raise $150,000."
Klein also plans to spend the summer canvassing the district. Once classes end in May, the real work will begin, and he plans to knock on at least 15,000 doors twice. He will share his experience -- having been involved in liberal politics in the state since the age of 14, serving in Amnesty International, the Gay-Straight Alliance and the American Civil Liberties Union, along with his current work with the Wisconsin Public Interest Research Group -- along with his big issues -- transportation, health care and education.
By getting face time and talking with as many people as will listen, Klein hopes to overcome the assumptions many constituents might have when they hear his age.
"I think the most serious thing you can do is meet a person," he said. "If a candidate comes to my door, the first thing that's going to hit me is their appearance. But you can learn a lot about them in that first five minutes."

February 14, 2010

Am I the candidate for you?


 If you believe that 50,000,000 people in the United States do not deserve health care through insurance or a public option, then I am not the candidate for you.
If you believe that people should have to pay for gas when it reaches 4.00+ dollars a gallon instead of ride a train for half the cost and half the pollution, then I am not the candidate for you.
If you believe we should be spending an average of 2.2 million dollars on the death penalty per case then I am not the candidate for you. 
If you believe that education around our state should continue to see cuts so kids can't afford college then I am not the candidate for you.
If you believe that bringing jobs to the state of Wisconsin through building infrastructure like rail, repairing roads and building schools is not the way to go, then I am not the candidate for you. 
If you believe that corporations should continue to pay little to no taxes instead of taking their fair share of the responsibility, then I am not the candidate for you.
If you believe that Lake Michigan isn't a vital resource to our environment and the issues of zebra muscles and Asian Carp are not a big deal, then I am not the candidate for you. 
If you believe that our environment and economy will not benefit from creating a green energy structure like wind mills and solar panels then I am not the candidate for you.