NEW: Teen Vogue Features Providence City Council Candidate Kerwin

GoLocalProv Political Team

NEW: Teen Vogue Features Providence City Council Candidate Kerwin

Kat Kerwin PHOTO: Facebook
Providence City Council Candidate Kat Kerwin was featured in Teen Vogue’s story “Why Ja'Mal Green, Kat Kerwin, and Hadiya Afzal are Running for Office.”

Kerwin, 21, is running against Terrence Hassett for Providence City Council Ward 12. The primary is set for September 12.

"I think the best part of it is in my mind, whenever something is going wrong with the campaign or I don’t know how to do certain nitty-gritty things, I have dozens of women...where I could immediately pick up the phone and they would drop anything and they would help me even though they have their own campaigns to be running and their own families or jobs,” Kerwin told Teen Vogue.

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

Read the Article Here

About Kerwin, Teen Vogue writes:

Other contenders striving to make a difference include Kat Kerwin, a 21-year-old from Rhode Island who's running for Providence City Council Ward 12 against an incumbent who was first elected to the seat the year Kat was born.

For Kat, running for office means making Providence a national example of what progressive policy-making can achieve; she also wants to offer another candidate option to a community that has had the same representative for over two decades.

The magazine then goes on talk about Kerwin’s career:

Kat began working for Providence City Hall at 13 years old before moving out of state and attending the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

She made local and national news running her university's Cocks Not Glocks campaign, which was based on the campaign organized by Jessica Jin at the University of Texas-Austin and called for people to display sex toys on their backpacks. The movement brought attention to the fact that many campuses have “obscenity rules” that threaten disciplinary action for publicly displaying sex toys on campuses, yet some lawmakers want to allow concealed weapons.

Kat decided to organize a Cocks Not Glocks protest at her college in December 2016 after Wisconsin state representative Jesse Kremer reintroduced a campus carry bill that he’d already proposed in 2015.


GoLocal: Benchmark Poll, October 2017

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.