D.C. internship helps Wichita State senior work with voting issues

  • Wichita State senior Alejandro Arias Esparza spent last spring interning at FairVote in Washington, D.C. He researched voting records and trends among elected officials and met with staff members in Congress.
  • Arias Esparza co-wrote an editorial advocating for Ranked Choice Voting that appeared in The Wichita Eagle. 
  • Arias Esparza wants to use his experiences to help the Latino community in Wichita connect with city government.

Alejandro Arias Esparza believes every vote counts and he wants everyone to use that right.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all we have,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like the only power we truly have in our democracy. We can protest and scream and we can yell all we want, but it鈥檚 not going to mean anything if the same people keep getting reelected.鈥

His belief comes from his appreciation for what life in the United States offers a student who was born in Aguascalientes, Mexico. He moved to California around 11 and to Wichita a year later. He attended East High School and is a senior political science major at Wichita State.

Last spring, Arias Esparza worked as an intern at FairVote in Washington, D.C., an internship funded by former Kansas governor Mark and Stacy Parkinson. The internship gave him practical experience in research, writing and meeting people that can help him help others vote and grow active in their communities. 

鈥淚鈥檝e always felt very powerfully about empowering the smaller communities to vote, the ones that don鈥檛 usually vote,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the thought of all people having a voice, which I think in my own political-science way is the true American dream. Vote and make it count.鈥

His internship included working on a 285-page report on voting trends, fund-raising and connections by Congress members. The report will be used by FairVote to determine which elected officials are interested in voting rights and how to network and lobby those politicians and others.

He learned how to make a Freedom of Information Act request. He researched state voting data bases, talked to secretaries of state around the country and went to the capitol to talk to elected officials and staff members.

鈥淭hat was my favorite part,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey actually asked me for my ideas, what I thought about something, and I thought that was very important. It was empowering to have a member of Congress ask what I thought about something.鈥

FairVote, which started in 1992, describes itself as 鈥渁 nonpartisan champion of electoral reforms that give voters greater choice, a stronger voice, and a representative democracy that works for all Americans.鈥

One of their initiatives is promoting Ranked Choice Voting, which allows voters to rank candidates on their ballot. Arias Esparza and associate professor Neal Allen co-wrote a commentary in June in The Wichita Eagle endorsing Ranked Choice Voting used by the Kansas Democratic Party in the May 2020 presidential primary.

 Arias Esparza describes Ranked Choice Voting as one of the ways FairVote works for representation. He used Kansas and Maryland as examples of where Ranked Choice Voting may produce elected members of the House of Representatives that more completely represent the population 鈥 Democrats in Kansas and Republicans in Maryland.

Vote and make it count.
Alejandro Arias Esparza,
Wichita State senior

鈥淲e want to see that the minority wasn鈥檛 electing the majority kind of thing 鈥 making sure offices were equally divided,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t guarantees an elected official gets a majority vote and not just part of it. There鈥檚 races 鈥 for example 10 people running for five spots 鈥 that means any person could win if they get 21 percent of the votes. Twenty-one percent of the votes is not 100 percent of the population. What Ranked Choice Voting tries to do is get rid of that gap.鈥

Arias Esparza planned to study accounting before taking a political science class at Butler Community College. His classes at Wichita State opened possibilities for his future.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a very broad major, so from there you can expand into education, you can go into law,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 just so much you can do with a political science major, it鈥檚 almost easy.鈥

Allen noticed Arias Esparza鈥檚 willingness to participate in his classes and soon relied on him as a leader for discussions.

鈥淗e can advocate own position and do so based on evidence,鈥 Allen said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 willing to take risks and be public about his work and views.鈥

His studies, work with voting drives and political discussions at Wichita State and the internship all help to build a path to future projects. His past powers his desire to help people vote and improve their communities.

鈥淗e鈥檚 very in tune with his culture,鈥 said Abel Barraza, a senior mechanical engineering major and fellow member of Sigma Lambda Beta. 鈥淲e became such close friends because we鈥檙e so appreciative of what our parents sacrificed to help get us where we are today. It鈥檚 easy for people to forget where their parents came from and all the work and all the sacrifice they went through for them.鈥

Arias Esparza wants to focus his education and training to help businesses and community relations in the Latino areas of Wichita.

鈥淢y goal is to see my Latino community thrive,鈥 he said. 鈥淐reate a bridge between the city and the Latino community. There鈥檚 a huge gap between the Latino community and government.鈥


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