Ronald Schurin, Ph.D.

Professor Emeritus University of Connecticut

  • Storrs CT

Expert in the politics of presidential campaigns

Contact

University of Connecticut

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Biography

Ronald C. Schurin received his Ph.D. from the City University of New York in 1997 and received a Master of Public Affairs degree from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University in 1977. He has held policy and administrative positions at the New Jersey Department of Education, the former U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, and The City University of New York. From 1997 to 2008 he served as Executive Assistant to the President of the University of Connecticut and concurrently was Executive Secretary of the University Board of Trustees. His research interests include American political parties, electoral realignment, the Presidency, and Congress.

Areas of Expertise

American Politics and Elections
Connecticut Politics
Electoral Politics
American Politics
Education Policy

Education

The Graduate Center, City University of New York

Ph.D.

Political Science

1997

Princeton University

M.P.A.

Public Affairs

1977

University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

M.A.

History

1975

Affiliations

  • Member: Mansfield, CT Town Council

Accomplishments

Presidential Elector

2012

Social

Media

Media Appearances

Connecticut's election-year economy is a 'mixed bag.' Is it really making a difference among voters?

Hearst Connecticut Media  print

2024-10-07

“A lot of people look at whatever economic data there is as a way of confirming their pre-existing point of view,” said Ronald Schurin, a professor emeritus of political science at the University of Connecticut, Storrs.

“And so if you’re a Democrat and you look at the stock market being at record numbers and you look at unemployment being pretty low and you put inflation dropping down below 3 percent, you say ‘Well my party’s done pretty well,” he added. “But if you’re the Republicans … you look at the fact that prices are higher than they were four years ago and you look at some economic insecurity in some industries and you think that things are not so good.”

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How education has changed as an election issue in CT and across the U.S.

Hearst Connecticut Media  

2024-09-26

Even when it generally ranks low in importance in presidential election issues, said Ronald Schurin, professor emeritus in political science at the University of Connecticut, he thinks that in some ways, education has become an extremely significant political issue because of everything else it is intertwined with.

“It has become a stand in for cultural issues,” Schurin said.

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Long road to November vote: Short primary may not benefit voters

UPI  online

2024-03-14

But meanwhile, the rematch between Biden and Trump sets the stage for a return to, or a continuance of, negative campaigning. The effect of a drawn-out back-and-forth of attack ads and jabs on the campaign trail can drive some voters away, Ronald Schurin, political science professor at the University of Connecticut, told UPI.

"The average voter now has this antipathy toward politics and will view the next several months of intense negative campaigning by both sides as something that will be a turnoff," Schurin said. "They will take everything with a large grain of salt, saying 'it's all presidential politics.'"

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Articles

A vice-presidental pick, even in defeat, can go on to make a difference

Hartford Courant

2020-07-27

Former Vice President Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, has close to a dozen women under consideration for his former job. Some are senators, some governors, some mayors, some something else. But for any and all, getting the nod will be more than an opportunity to help defeat Donald Trump, cherished though that chance will be. Even if the Biden-Whoever campaign loses, history suggests that the vice-presidential nomination could lead to greater things ahead. Whatever happens in November, a second-place spot on the ticket is a prize well worth having.

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