By Tamara E. Holmes
With the 2022 midterm elections sparking fears about everything from voter suppression to threats to democracy, Howard University is doing its part to weed through the misinformation.
Journalism students and faculty in the Department of Media, Journalism and Film in the Cathy Hughes School of Communications will be covering local, state and national races, as well as issues important to the Black community through the 2022 Howard University Election Project.
Students will work Election Day from approximately 6:30 am before the polls open until the wee hours of Wednesday morning when many of the results will be in. They will fan out to local polling places in Washington, D.C.; Maryland, and Virginia, as well as other locations to cover local races including the D.C. mayoral contest and the Maryland governor’s race, in which Wes Moore is expected to become the first Black governor of the state.
Some students will be embedded at the Ronald Walters Election Day Command Center, a joint effort between The Ronald Walters Leadership and Public Policy Center at Howard University and the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation (NCBCP). The Center tracks voter suppression, Black voter turnout and problems at voting precincts.