The 2020 American elections are the
subject of two online panel discussions at UNH, moderated by the
Boston-based, award-winning journalist and filmmaker Callie Crossley, in
this year's Rutman Distinguished Lecture Series on the American
Presidency.
The 2020 Election: What Might Happen and What it Might Mean
Monday, Oct. 12, 2020, from 6:30-7:30 p.m.
REGISTER HERE
Callie Crossley will guide a conversation
just weeks before the election with Tito Jackson ’99, former Boston
city counselor and mayoral candidate; Emily Baer, UNH assistant
professor of political science; and Kurk Dorsey, UNH professor of
history, about the potential outcomes of the 2020 elections, covering
the presidential and congressional races, as well as New Hampshire’s
contests. From the long lens of history to the micro level of
ground-game politics, the panel will contextualize and analyze the
current political moment and consider what it tells us about our
nation’s future.
The 2020 Election: What Happened and Why
Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2020, from 6:30-7:30 p.m.
REGISTER HERE
One week after the election, Callie
Crossley will return to moderate a discussion with Jennifer Horn,
co-founder of the Lincoln Project and former chair of the NH
Republican Party; Andrew Smith, UNH professor of practice in
political science and director of the UNH Survey Center; and Jason
Sokol, UNH professor of history. The panel will examine the outcomes of
the elections as well as the issues and forces that shaped the
electorate’s will in 2020.
See speaker bios and more at the event landing page.
Both events are free and open to the public. These events will not be recorded.
The Rutman Distinguished Lecture Series on the American Presidency is generously supported by J. Morgan ’84 and Tara Rutman. The lecture series focuses on American political history with an emphasis on the modern and historical context of the American Presidency.