
Incoming sophomore Kennedy Logsdon (left) started on Andrew Yang political action club shortly after moving to Dallas from Nebraska. Photo by Cindy Folefack | Editor-in-Chief
Incoming student promotes Democratic candidate Andrew Yang, political involvement for 2020 election through new group
In the midst of a 2020 election saturated with 24 democratic
candidates, one incoming UTD sophomore has settled on a candidate she believes
can get to the oval office, and recently founded a club to spread awareness
among students.
Finance sophomore Kennedy Logsdon got involved with Dallas
for Yang, a volunteer group to support presidential candidate Andrew Yang,
after moving to the DFW area from Nebraska. Upon realizing that the group
needed more outreach among college students, Logsdon decided to start a club at
UTD.
“It seemed like he had a lot of policies that got both
people from the aisle in, and he released his donor list and there were no
corporations that were supporting him,” Logsdon said. “It was grassroots, the
people that were supporting him were just people, so… it felt good to see
something that a lot of people supported.”
Logsdon said some of her favorite policies include Yang’s carbon
tax, which would impose a $40 per ton tax on carbon, and ranked choice voting,
where voters would list their top three candidates. Yang’s most famous policy,
Universal Basic Income, would give every American $1,000 per month and would be
funded through taxes to tech giants such as Google and Amazon, as well as other
sources such as the carbon tax. Logsdon said that criticisms of the plan, which
claim that its goals are unrealistic, are inaccurate.
“I was on SNAP and food benefits my whole life, and if there
was a flat tire, you were out of luck for that,” she said. “So the criticism of
people saying we can’t afford it, but knowing that there are ways to pay for
it, we’re already spending this money, and things like the carbon tax go
directly into that, I just don’t think there’s room to criticize it.”
Logsdon added that current systems like SNAP and other food
benefits have their flaws, which she saw firsthand growing up.
“My family was on (SNAP) for the first 10 years of my life,
and there are a lot of things that you miss out on. There were still nights
where my mom wouldn’t get to eat dinner, but my siblings would,” Logsdon said.
“Even then, it doesn’t cover clothes. What happens when your sneakers are worn
through? You can’t go to school barefoot. What happens when your car breaks
down and your mom can’t make it to work? It’s just a lot of things that food
stamps don’t cover.”
Logsdon said that being new to the university made the
process of starting a club more difficult, but she wrote the club’s constitution
herself before finally announcing the club’s creation on the UTD subreddit. The
club will begin hosting socials and recruitment events as membership grows,
Logsdon said. Despite Yang’s current polling numbers, which put him at 1-3% of
the vote, Logsdon is confident in his ability to win the election.
“I think he’s doing very well as far as a grassroots
candidate would go,” she said. “Especially seeing how many more people around
the nation are getting involved, I think he does have a good shot.”