10-year-old Jewish reporter at the Democratic debate
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10-year-old Jewish reporter at the Democratic debate

Had some tough questions ready for Bernie Sanders

Shawn Fairbairn, Kids Scoop News reporter, reporting from the Democratic debate in Westerville, Ohio.Photo by Ron Kampeas
Shawn Fairbairn, Kids Scoop News reporter, reporting from the Democratic debate in Westerville, Ohio.Photo by Ron Kampeas

Give 10-year-old Shawn Fairbairn this: He’s a political reporter who cuts to the quick.

He thinks that Marianne Williamson, the self-help guru seeking the Democratic presidential nomination, should stick to writing books. His first question for a top surrogate for Bernie Sanders was whether the Vermont senator was up to the job of running for president after a heart attack.

And if he gets a moment to talk to Sanders himself? He has a great gotcha question ready: What’s his favorite Ben and Jerry’s flavor?

“I’d ask him how he’s feeling and if he recovered well, I think I’ll ask him that about his favorite flavor,” Fairbairn explained, anticipating Sanders’ likely appearance in the spin room after the Oct. 15 debate in Westerville, Ohio.

Fairbairn was the latest reporter representing KidScoop Media at the debates. KidScoop Media is a Culver City, California outfit that gets kids interested in the news by getting them to report on it.

The Jewish Telegraphic Agency profiled another KidScoop Media reporter, Jeffery Kraft, in July at the debate in Detroit. He was the youngest reporter there, 10 years old at the time.

Fairbairn, like Kraft, is Jewish, and attends Hebrew school at Temple Akiba in Culver City twice a week. He says without hesitation that his favorite Jewish holiday is Rosh Hashanah.

“I really like the Rosh Hashanah dinners and I like being with my family a lot,” he said. “I really like matzah balls.”
Matzah balls? What about apples and honey?

“I don’t actually really like apples and honey,” said Fairbairn, and then added with the politest expression of disgust shadowing his face.

Shawn has more serious questions to ask the candidates too.

“I want to ask how they will empower kids like me who want to make a difference in the world,” he said.

How does Fairbairn want to make a difference?

“Rainforests. I like all the animals in them, I like animals a lot, frogs are my favorite animals and a lot of frogs live in rainforests,” he said.

Shawn actually met Williamson when the candidate had an event in Culver City in July.

“Why did you take a break from writing books to go into politics?” he asked her.

Her answer: She still is writing, on Twitter.

“I just wanted to know, when we looked her up we saw she was an author, that she used to be author and then she became a politician,” Fairbairn told JTA. “I like to read books, I would wonder why people would stop writing, because I think that books are amazing.”

It was at least a more normative encounter than Kraft’s with Williamson, at the July debate. Williamson gave Kraft an odd scoop — that her cat was dead.

The night of the debate, Fairbairn, sporting a gray suit, a blue shirt, a black bow tie and a Sony camera around his neck, wandered the spin room and scored an interview with Nina Turner, the former Ohio state senator who is the president of Our Revolution, the political action committee that grew out of Sanders’ 2016 campaign.

“I asked her how Senator Sanders was doing,” Fairbairn said. “She said he’s feeling great, he’s in high spirits. She said he has a lot of energy.”

Turner told Fairbairn that Sanders and Ben and Jerry are all Vermonters, and that the ice cream mavens back Sanders’ campaign.

But it was JTA who told Fairbairn that Sanders, Ben, Jerry and Williamson were all Jewish.

His eyebrows shot up. “I did not know that!” pjc

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