When a group of college-aged women arrived at a luxury Washington D.C. apartment, they planned to unpack, get to know one another and prepare for the prestigious Capitol Hill internships that awaited them over Spring semester.
But as two of the women settled into the dorm-style room they’d be sharing and began to decorate, a potential problem stared them in the face: Each hung a poster on opposite sides of the room, one pro-life, the other pro-choice.
At first frustrated and alarmed, with one calling a program director to vent late one night, the liberal and conservative roommates eventually found more than a middle ground between their twin beds — they became good friends.
“They’re forced to consider the opinions of people who are not like themselves,” Running Start President and Founder Susannah Wellford told MSNBC, comparing her program to MTV’s “The Real World.”
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The non-profit Running Start/Walmart Star Fellowship offers seven women each semester the opportunity to work closely primarily with female senators and congresswomen. The program comes with a $2,000 stipend per semester and free housing in the swanky, historic Capitol Hill neighborhood.
The program prides itself on being non-partisan, but for some fellows, the idea of such opposing, passionate views under one roof might seem more like a sentencing than a benefit.
“I’m not going to say it was all roses. It was difficult,” former fellow Antonia Okafor told MSNBC, recalling the friction of Spring 2014. “But living together showed me that the other side isn’t the enemy — we could compromise.”
Okafor, who hung the pro-life poster, and her roommate later landed jobs in Texas — one with Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, the other at the liberal PAC Battleground Texas— and have remained close friends.
“In our program, we try to purposefully put people in rooms who are as different as possible,” said Running Start Vice President Melissa Richmond. “We refuse to accommodate needs like that person is more ideologically different from me.”
MSNBC interviewed roughly a dozen young women who won the Star Fellowship over the last five years. The program is designed to encourage women to run for elected office.
The directors are hoping their formula leads to a future Congress that not only works together, but understands each other.
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The fellows chosen for the Fall 2015 semester are now living in a pale blue townhouse with a garden entrance that’s nestled in a tony stretch of official Washington.
“In theory it’s scary, but it’s early so we’re all happy,” said 22-year-old Chene Karega, who grew up in a northern suburb of Detroit. “It could go all downhill from here, but we’ll think about that at another time,” the University of Michigan graduate said.
The house, a stone’s throw from the Supreme Court, has three floors, two fireplaces and a chandelier in the formal dining room. The spacious living room has a cozy couch and a flat-screen TV where Karega said “House of Cards” is a Netflix favorite. There are marble floors and a jacuzzi.
Right now, the issues don’t extend beyond dirty dishes and the morning rush to get ready and out the door. But they are now one month into their internships and if previous semesters are any indication, the political debates will find their way back home.
“It’s like a big slumber party,” Cierra Jackson said. Her bed was decorated with colorful pillows, a stash of Cinnamon Toast Crunch cereal peeking out of the top shelf in the closet.
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In the past, Thursday nights in the house have been primarily about one thing: “Scandal,” the ABC prime time hit about Washington power and the woman at the center of it all.
Sitting around in pajamas, eating mac and cheese, the scene was not unlike a typical slumber party except that it also involved a debate about incarceration rates in the United States.
“I just had this moment where I realized I hadn’t had a debate where only women were talking,” former fellow Catherine Ettman said. “Everyone had different viewpoints and personal experiences with friends and it got really heated, but everyone stayed in the room, and then ‘Scandal’ came on and we were back to being roommates.”
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Wellford, president of Running Start, didn’t realize the program would create such a profound sense of unity when it first launched. “We really had no idea how the pieces of the program would actually work. What I really want,” she said, “is not just women to run for office, but women who are going to run and talk to the other side and compromise.”
In September 2013, Ettman, a Princeton University graduate, was placed at the Democratic National Committee to work with Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida. She was eager to get to work when something unexpected happened: The government shut down.
“It was really frustrating. You see these great leaders and they’re supposed to be making life better for Americans — not only is that not happening, but they couldn’t come to an agreement,” Ettman said. “You realize the impact of not being able to collaborate.”
RELATED: Women in Politics – College Edition
Ultimately, it was the women of the Senate who worked across party lines to get the government up and running again after being shut down for 16 days. They have worked to address sexual assault in the military and on campus and helped bring equal pay to the forefront of the 2016 presidential election.








