Posters in the windows of Bed-Stuy, t-shirts by the rack in Fort Greene, and a neighborhood supporters group called “The Audacity of Park Slope.”
In the months leading up to the presidential election, much of Brooklyn has demonstrably become Barack Obama country, particularly among the borough’s young voters.
But what about Sam Rivera? The 21-year-old Cardozo law student lives in Williamsburg’s “Northside,” an area increasingly known for its artsy, and decidedly liberal, hipster population. Sam, however, is no supporter of the Illinois Democrat. He is the vice president of the Brooklyn Young Republican Club. In a land of free political thought, that’s just fine, but in his neighborhood and in his age group, it certainly isn’t expected. Being a young Republican in today’s Brooklyn often means fighting an uphill battle – against assumption and for acceptance.
“Whenever I tell people that I’m a Republican and then where I live, they say ‘I didn’t know there were any of you guys there!’” says Rivera, who was born and raised in his neighborhood.
The Board of Elections’ most recent registration tally says that his assembly district in Williamsburg is home to over 6,000 GOP voters, but nearly 45,000 Democrats. Numbers by age group are not available, but with national polls indicating that most young voters are for Obama, the assumption in Rivera’s neighborhood is clear: “Some people take it for granted that I am for Obama because of my age,” he says. “But I would hope that no one would expect people to be a certain way based on generalizations.”
Rivera is used to the generalizations. In college, he recalls coming up against them time and again in interactions with fellow students: “They’d make Bush comments or say to me ‘Are you going to the Dems event?’ I’d say ‘I’ll consider it’ – not ‘Democrats be damned’ – but call it what you want, I call it profiling, and I’ve come to expect it.” Ageism, he says, does not only affect older people.
Rivera, who traces his roots to Guatemala, has also encountered race-based judgments: “People don’t just think I’m a Democrat – they hear my last name and think I’m for Hillary!” A Pew Center analysis of Hispanic voting patterns in this year’s democratic primary showed a 2-1 preference for Hillary Clinton over Barack Obama.
Today’s political climate, Rivera says, makes it impossible to break through the assumptions. “I’d be lying if I were to tell you that I went out into local coffee shops and entered into political discourse. Politics have become so polarized now, no one wants to talk, no one wants to debate, they just want to hold their own.” Rivera, who calls himself a moderate and insists that he is “about ideas,” says he is willing to show that coffee-shop openness, but doubts about its effectiveness keep him from doing so. One of the reasons he prefers McCain to Obama is for what he perceives to be the Republican candidate’s willingness to reach across the aisle.
Rivera grew up in a household of Democrats, but began to question his family’s stance in the last years of high school, he says. He started thinking in a “national sense” after the 9/11 attacks, he said, and declared himself a Republican. Obama, he says, does not yet have the necessary experience, or a firm enough stance on defense issues, to lead the country.
Rivera wears no McCain pin and sports no McCain cap – “I’m not going to go out and put myself in the line of fire,” he explains – but that doesn’t stop the vice president of the Brooklyn Young Republican Club from campaigning. His group, founded in 1881, but only reestablished in 2004 after a hiatus, has well under 100 paying members. However, it boasts 40 new registrants since June – mainly from neighborhoods with larger conservative constituencies, such as Bay Ridge, Mill Basin and Greenpoint. Together, they rally behind party candidates and work toward “the republican revival of Brooklyn.” That includes trying to locate and recruit some of the other GOP members in Williamsburg who have been hard to come by.
Dues are $15 a year for full-time students and $25 a year for non-students between 18 and 40 years of age. Polling by Rock the Vote, the organization whose goal is to mobilize young voters, only includes voters up to 29, but in an effort to grow the organization, that age limit has been extended by more than a decade.
Members from the borough’s liberal strongholds are rare, even Rivera admits. “When a person at a meet-the-candidate event says they’re from my neighborhood, it’s a shock to me,” he says. “I guess I fall into assuming sometimes as well.”
Rivera admits to occasionally feeling out of place as a young Republican in the Northside, but the thought of moving from his neighborhood hasn’t crossed his mind, he says. Differences of political opinion are not cause for such drastic measures. “People in my neighborhood do what they believe will bring about their goals,” says Rivera. “I respect that, and I’m doing that, too.”