Shelly Chauncey, a ’17 alumna, is running for Congress in  the 7th District seat currently held by GOP Rep. Patrick Meehan, The Philadelphia  Inquirer reported on Jan. 22. 
Chauncey, a resident of Glen Mills, Pennsylvania, is stepping  in after Democratic state Sen. Daylin Leach announced that he would step back from  the closely watched race after women accused him of inappropriate touching and sexualized jokes.
Meehan faces his own questions about conduct towards women,  in the wake of a New York Times report that the three-term Congressman secretly settled a harassment complaint,  using thousands of dollars in taxpayer money. House Speaker Paul Ryan said  Meehan would be removed immediately from the House Ethics Committee, which  investigates sexual misconduct claims against members of congress. 
In the Inquirer,  however, Chauncey cited other motivations for entering the race. 
“I can’t sit back and watch our representative  go to Washington and support an administration that’s taking away our  health care and destroying the equality of our education,” she told the Inquirer.  
In a press release, Chauncey explained that she  is “running because we aren't going to see real change in Washington  unless we send different kinds of people there...people who don't drive a  pick-up truck in a campaign ad, but who actually drive one in real life. People  who can speak to the experience most people have to the chaos they are creating  in Washington.”
Chauncey, who currently works as a peer counselor and  mental health ambassador in the legal profession, is the daughter of a prison  guard and a teacher. 
As a student, she worked in the Appellate  Litigation Clinic and co-authored an article, with Professor Donald Tibbs,  “From Slavery to Hip-Hop: Punishing Black  Speech and What’s ‘Unconstitutional’ About Prosecuting Young Black Men Through  Art,” which appeared in 2017 in the Washington  University Journal of Law & Policy.