91桃色

Skip to Content

91桃色 Law Student Wants to Continue Giving Back to His Community

Back to News Listing

Author(s)

Matt Meyer

Writer

Writer"

matt.meyer@du.edu

From Legislation to Legal Practice, Nigel Daniels Strives to Help Underdogs

Profile  •
Campus Life  •
Nigel Daniels smiling

It wasn鈥檛 just a burgeoning career in politics or a passion for public policy that pushed Nigel Daniels into law school.

Growing up, his family was poor. His mother worked to support two sons, and his brother had developmental disabilities. The family relied on the state for support in custody battles and for his brother鈥檚 health care.

Once, as they waited at a Denver bus stop, his mother told him they were meeting a lawyer.

鈥淚鈥檓 thinking, it鈥檚 going to be a suit and tie and all those stereotypes you expect of lawyers,鈥 Daniels recalls. 鈥淲e鈥檙e sitting at the bus stop. The RTD pulls up, and there鈥檚 that 鈥榖eep, beep, beep, beep, beep.鈥 It鈥檚 this woman in a wheelchair.
鈥淪he rolled off the bus and said, 鈥業鈥檓 your lawyer.鈥 Watching her fight for my brother, she fought harder than anybody. That鈥檚 where I think I learned you can really do something with this profession.鈥

That put him on track to eventually attend the 91桃色, where he will graduate from this weekend. As if that鈥檚 not enough, he鈥檚 also the student commencement speaker for the law school.

His path to the legal world was not entirely divorced from public policy and politics. He earned his undergraduate degree in political science and government as a Daniels Scholar at Colorado State University, serving as president of the student government and pre-law club.

After that, he was a special assistant for the U.S. Senate for a year, then joined U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet鈥檚 successful reelection campaign in the spring of 2016.

While coordinating student outreach, Daniels planned a campaign event for Bennet to connect with students on the Auraria Campus. Traditionally, such events are held in a lecture hall or university center, but Daniels insisted the event be outdoors in a high-traffic area. He initially received pushback from officials over security concerns and expected turnout, but Daniels persisted.

鈥淟et鈥檚 do what the students do,鈥 he told them. 鈥淟et鈥檚 get out on the plaza, get the senator out there.鈥

They finally conceded, Daniels says.

鈥淲e were deciding whether to host it in Boulder, at 91桃色 or Metro, and we went for Metro because there was more traffic between buildings, stuff like that.

鈥淚 was like, 鈥榃e need to get somebody who鈥檚 popping in Denver.鈥 The mayor (Michael Hancock), he鈥檚 kind of hip, he went to (CU-Denver). It made sense.鈥

It was a right-place, right-time situation. The event was a success, and Hancock noticed. Shortly thereafter, Daniels was interviewing to be Hancock鈥檚 aide.

鈥淚 was interviewing, and he made me an offer right on the spot,鈥 Daniels says. 鈥淚 said, 鈥楿h, I鈥檒l think about it.鈥 That鈥檚 what you鈥檙e supposed to do. To this day, he still won鈥檛 let me live that down. He joked that he wanted to tell me I didn鈥檛 have the job anymore.鈥

Their relationship has lasted, and Daniels now is a senior advisor to the mayor.

In between, he pursued law school in earnest, applying only to the 91桃色.

Daniels grew up in Denver, attending schools in and around the city. His undergrad studies took him only 65 miles north on Interstate 25, and his work with Bennet and Hancock brought him back from a short stint in Washington, D.C.

The city of Denver is at the center of his passions, he says, and the University is tied directly to the municipality.
Daniels said one of his proudest achievements at 91桃色 was the work he did with the and other student affinity groups to further diversity, equity and inclusivity.

鈥淭his is our 1L summer, and we were just so perplexed with what was going on,鈥 Daniels says. 鈥淲e have Black Lives Matter protests, (the murder of) George Floyd, COVID, and we鈥檙e locked in our homes. My classmate wrote this three-page letter about everything wrong with the system and just sent it. We had all looked over it as a group to make sure it was in line with what we thought, but the response we got from the campus was amazing.

鈥淗e got e-mails from students, faculty and deans who were telling him thank you and how everyone needed to talk about this more.

鈥淔rom that letter, we were able to come together 鈥 all of us, not just the Black law students 鈥 and force a dean to meet with us monthly. We were able to set benchmarks for diversity and equity, for scholarships and recruitment. It was truly an opportunity for us to practice some of these advocacy skills.鈥

In 2021, Daniels sunk his teeth into the professional legal world as a summer associate for Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, a Denver firm with 13 offices around the country, including one in Washington, D.C.

He鈥檒l join the firm fully after graduation. For now, he plans to stay in Denver, though he鈥檚 considered returning to the nation鈥檚 capital. He says he鈥檒l specialize in government affairs, looking specifically at land use and real estate, two facets with an outsized effect on low-income Coloradans.

Now that he鈥檚 ending law school, Daniels says, he鈥檒l need time to properly reflect and honor those who supported him along the way.

鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just about me. It鈥檚 about all these people who supported me,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 overwhelming to think about what that looks like.鈥

To learn more about this year's Commencement ceremonies, please听click here.

Related Articles