We have a big story to tell
Help us celebrate all the good Cornellians can do! Tell us about the areas and organizations you support in your community. ❤️🐻
Share your storySee resources and slide materials from the “Connecting with Policymakers” presentation, given on January 22, 2026, by the Cornell Office of Federal Relations.
Questions and comments about this presentation may be sent to:
Dianne Miller
Dianne.Miller@cornell.edu
Damien Sharp
drs395@cornell.edu
| Federal Agency | President’s FY26 Budget Proposal* | Congressional Appropriations FY26 Final** | Cornell Research (Year ended 6/30/24)*** |
|---|---|---|---|
| National Institutes of Health | $27.0 billion | $48.7 billion | $473.94 million |
| National Science Foundation | $3.9 billion | $8.75 billion | $137.07 million |
| Department of Defense (Basic Research) | $2.26 billion | $2.34 billion | $68.99 million |
| Department of Agriculture (AFRI) | $405.0 million | $435.0 million | $43.03 million |
| Department of Energy (Office of Science, ARPA-E) | $7.29 billion | $8.75 billion | $29.37 million |
| NASA (Science, Aeronautics, Space Technology) | $5.06 billion | $9.1 billion | $12.03 million |
*White House OMB – President’s FY26 Budget Request
** Congressional Research Service – Appropriations Status Table
*** Cornell Research & Innovation – FY2024 Research Expenditures (PDF)
An Op-Ed is one of 3 basic columns that appear on the opinion pages of most newspapers and online media:
Purpose:
White Paper: In-depth analysis & recommendations
Op-Ed: Persuasive argument on current policy issue
Tone & Style:
White Paper: Formal, academic, neutral
Op-Ed: Informal, engaging, persuasive
Length:
White Paper: 10–50 pages, thorough research
Op-Ed: 600–1,200 words, concise
Structure:
White Paper: Structured with sections & headings
Op-Ed: Clear, singular point, less structured
YOUR THESIS →
BACK UP YOUR THESIS (supporting evidence) →
WHAT’S NEXT? SOLUTIONS! (or CALL TO ACTION)
| Problem led | Solution led | New way of thinking | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thesis | Highlights a problem not getting enough attention | Highlights a little explored or counterintuitive solution to a problem widely discussed | Proposes a new way of thinking about a timely topic |
| Supporting evidence | Backs up why it’s a problem and matters now | Explains why this solution can work, anticipates and responds to criticisms of the argument | Explains how alternative views are misguided |
| What’s next | Proposes solutions — a way forward | Proposes next steps — call to action | Conveys why this matters |
With the right ingredients, an op-ed can stand out:
Breaking down your message into thirds can help turn multipart arguments into accessible and engaging content
Editors are always seeking content on the news of the week, day, even hour. Having a timely news peg can be one tool to grab an editor’s attention.
Are you trying to reach a national audience? A state-wide audience? A regional audience? A targeted audience of environmentalists, academics, scientists, or higher ed professionals?