Judithanne McLauchlan crams for a run for office

The USFSP professor brings a wealth of political experience to the race for FL Senate.

click to enlarge OFFICE HOURS: McLaughlan at her desk at the USF St. Petersburg. - Kevin Tighe
Kevin Tighe
OFFICE HOURS: McLaughlan at her desk at the USF St. Petersburg.

Judithanne Scourfield McLauchlan has accomplished a lot in her 45 years on the planet, working at the highest levels of public service and national Democratic Party politics — interning at the White House, managing statewide presidential campaigns, getting considerable face time as a political pundit, even serving as a Fulbright Scholar in Moldova. But one thing she’s never done is run for political office.

Until now.

In November McLauchlan, an associate professor of political science at USFSP for the past 10 and a half years, confirmed that she would run for the Democratic nomination for the Senate District 22 seat currently held by Republican Jeff Brandes. The fundraising has begun, though she concedes that she will be thoroughly outspent by her opponent, a multimillionaire who benefited from the sale of his family’s lumber company in 2006.

McLaughlan said she had an epiphany while spending time in Washington in October during the government shutdown.

“If not now, when? If not me, who?” she says half-earnestly and half-ironically about her decision, which she said was more productive than continuing to whine to her husband Ramsay (a former Pinellas County Democratic Party chairman) while watching the nightly news.

Born and raised just outside of Philadelphia, Judithanne Scourfield graduated summa cum laude from Rider University in Lawrenceville, New Jersey in 1990. She went on to get her Masters at Rutgers University in 1994.

While at Rutgers she also spent considerable time in the nation’s capital, serving in the Office of Curator at the Supreme Court in 1992 and conducting legal research for the confirmation of Ruth Bader Ginsburg by Ted Kennedy’s Senate Judiciary Committee in 1993.

Winning a Presidential Intern Scholarship Award in 1995, she moved to the Clinton White House, where she worked for the Domestic Policy Council and First Lady’s Office. She went on to join the Clinton/Gore re-election effort in 1996 and spent time in the administration during his second term, including a stint as director of the White House comment line at the height of the Monica Lewinsky scandal in 1998.

When asked for her personal thoughts on the matter some 15 years later, McLaughlan says she didn’t initially believe the reports that the president was involved with a 22-year-old White House intern, in part because she knew first-hand about interns’ lack of access. She calls the former president “magnetic” and thought that Lewinsky might have misinterpreted his legitimate interest in helping people.

But one day while walking on the beach it dawned on her that, because the government had been shut down when the purported liaison began, Lewinsky probably was telling the truth. She confesses to feeling disappointment when the president admitted as much, but immediately adds that his transgression pales in comparison to the mistruths uttered by George W. Bush.

“I’m much more comfortable with that than lying about whether there were weapons of mass destruction sending people to die for,” she says.

After leaving the White House in 1999, she tried to help Al Gore get elected, working in New Hampshire, Maine, West Virginia and ultimately in Oregon. She then resumed her teaching career at Rutgers while working on her PhD.

It was while working on behalf of Jeanne Shaheen’s successful Senate run in New Hampshire in 2002 that she learned about the job at USF-St. Petersburg.

Darryl Paulson was the acting head of the College of Arts & Sciences at the university when McLaughlan was hired. He speaks fondly of her, reserving his only criticism for her tenure as head of the Civics Engagement program that she was instrumental in creating in 2006. He says she did a “fine job” in creating the position, but thought she stayed on too long. “As a junior faculty, the focus needs to be on doing the research necessary for promotion to a full professor. Tasks such as this take too much time away from establishing a research agenda.”

Among the most interesting of the classes she’s taught in her decade-plus tenure is “The Road to the White House,” which in 2004 and 2008 saw her travel with groups of 20 students to intern for the campaigns in the nation’s first-of-the-year presidential primaries. In 2012 she opted to keep her students back in Florida, where they could intern for any of the GOP candidates running in the Sunshine State’s critical primary election that year. (Students were free to sign up with any candidate. About half opted to get involved with Barack Obama’s re-election campaign.)

For McLaughlan, the “Road to the White House” class is the epitome of what she’s always been about: getting people engaged in the political process.

“I love working with students and I want to do what I can at the state Legislature to provide the kind of environment where they can stay here and raise a family here and get a good job here,” she says, concerned about what she calls a “terrible brain drain” that causes the best and the brightest to go elsewhere after college graduation.

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