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Seat at the Table: Taylor Berlin Talks About ANC Service

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Female student with black and white jacket at a conference.
Along with numerous campus activities and earning Dean's List grades, rising junior Taylor Berlin is an Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner.

麻豆传媒 is consistently ranked one of the most politically active campuses in the nation. Surprisingly, though, a presumed AU seat on a DC Advisory Neighborhood Commission remained unfilled for more than two years. With that bothersome reality in mind, Taylor Berlin decided to act.

James Harnett鈥攁 George Washington University student, friend, and current commissioner鈥攔eached out to Berlin about the need for another student ANC member. At first, Berlin鈥攁n already hyper-busy AU student鈥攈ad little desire to hold office.

鈥淚 said, 鈥業 don鈥檛 want to be a politician. I鈥檓 not interested in running for office. I won鈥檛 be any good at it.鈥 And then he told me how long the seat had been vacant,鈥 Berlin recalls in an interview. 鈥淭his is a city where students are always talking about voter disenfranchisement and not having enough political representation. And here was this seat at a table that was being left vacant, and I just couldn鈥檛 really stand for that.鈥

All Politics is Local

Choosing to pursue the position was just the first step. During a non-election year, she needed to gather 25 signatures for a petition. Yet if you read the fine print, that鈥檚 much, much harder than it sounds. The signatories of her petition had to be registered to vote in DC, and many AU students prefer to register in their home states. They also needed a 4400 Massachusetts Avenue address, according to the old maps, which ruled out students living on East Campus.

For Berlin, it was like a crash course in the art of local politicking and organizing. 鈥淚 went onto the quad, and I registered freshmen to vote. People who hadn鈥檛 registered in their home state, after eight or so months of being at college,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚 kind of created my own voter population.鈥

She got on the commission, holding the 3D07 seat. Sworn in by DC Councilmember Mary Cheh, Berlin鈥檚 parents and campaign helpers were on hand. Much of her work, she says, is being responsive to constituent needs.

鈥淚t is the most local form of politics, which in some ways makes it the most emotional form of politics. I think it affects people鈥檚 lives鈥攎aybe in small ways, but every day it can mean something,鈥 she says.

The job entails everything from writing resolutions to zoning commission hearings to liquor license approval for local businesses. She gave testimony to the City Council in support of a measure to lower the voting age.

She champions AU, and she thinks having an AU student at meetings facilitates a better relationship with the neighborhood. And she鈥檚 also come to appreciate helping non-student constituents in the community.

鈥淚f I can help some neighbor of mine who has a problem with a noise complaint, or with a sidewalk issue鈥攊f I can help that one person in their everyday life鈥攊sn鈥檛 that all politics is, just on a larger scale?鈥

Finding the Other News Junkies

Berlin grew up in Trumbull, Connecticut, and engaged in politics early. She worked for Republican Gubernatorial candidate Tom Foley, whose campaign was the 鈥渙nly one to call back a 14 year old.鈥 She later interned in a local office of US Rep. Jim Himes, D-Conn. While just a middle schooler accompanying her older sister鈥攚ho ended up at GW鈥攐n DC college tours, Taylor set her sights on AU. 鈥淚 said, 鈥業鈥檓 going to go to this school. Watch me.鈥 And I bought a T-shirt that day. I鈥檓 very good at planning,鈥 she jokes now.

As a high school senior, she attended an admitted AU student overnight on campus. She quickly realized she鈥檇 found her people. Her CNN news notifications were unusual in her Connecticut high school, but Berlin and her future AU classmates all started getting the same news alerts on their phones.

鈥淚t just clicked that I was around people who were finally interested in the things that I was interested in,鈥 she remembers.

Mentoring and Support

At AU, she鈥檚 found more of those like-minded students, joining quite a few campus organizations. She鈥檚 a member and mentor for AU College Democrats, and she does similar mentoring with AU Hillel. Berlin is also a member of the Model UN team, AU International Relations Society, and Alpha Xi Delta sorority. Amid all of her campus activities, she鈥檚 put in time at the Federal Communications Commission, Ralph Northam鈥檚 Virginia gubernatorial campaign, and this summer, she鈥檚 working in Washington at The NewDEAL, Developing Exceptional 麻豆传媒 Leaders.

A rising junior, Berlin is an international studies major and a public administration and policy minor. She mentions the invaluable support she鈥檚 received from numerous professors, including Ambassador Sally Shelton-Colby. 鈥淪he embodies what makes SIS so great, because we pull in some of these really fantastic people with so much experience,鈥 she notes, 鈥渁nd the stories she can tell are just unbelievable.鈥

Nothing is Assured

Berlin鈥檚 activism and ANC service didn鈥檛 happen in a vacuum, of course. She worked on the 2016 Hillary Clinton presidential campaign, and she was distraught watching election returns on the third floor of SIS.

鈥淲e were planning to run to the White House [if Hillary won],鈥 she recalls. 鈥淎nd I went to the White House the next day, but I went to protest. It was not how I thought it was going to happen.鈥

Berlin subsequently attended the Women鈥檚 March on the Mall, and she鈥檚 inspired to stay committed at the local level. 鈥淚 think it was just a wake-up call of how much harder we had to work, and how nothing was assured,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his has definitely pushed me to be more involved, because I can鈥檛 sit back and be passive.鈥