theconcordian
music life
Polo on pedals in Montreal P. 19
How to spend an afternoon in Montreal’s Chinatown P. 8
Violence on all sides A look inside the Anti-Police Brutality March
Full coverage P. 2 Tuesday, March 22, 2011
arts Pavarotti and nightmare monsters grace screens at the FIFA festival P. 9
music A backstage pass on how to make it as a concert promoter P. 14
opinions Does pretending to be homeless help the homeless? P. 22 Volume 28 Issue 25
CSU slates take different approaches to campaigning Your Concordia wants to know what you think, Action focuses on providing the answers Evan LePage News editor The first week of CSU elections may have brought the familiar sights of classroom speeches and poster-covered walls, but the two slates have actually taken very different approaches to campaigning thus far. Specifically, the two party leaders have expressed different goals for their interaction with students during the campaign period. Your Concordia’s presidential candidate Lex Gill said her slate is generally running a different sort of campaign than the CSU has seen in recent years, “one that’s focused on building meaningful relationships with students; asking people what they want before we tell them we’re representing them; creating dialogue; acknowledging that we don’t have all the answers but that we believe that we’re able to work together to make Concordia a better place.” Action’s presidential candidate Khalil Haddad, on the other hand, said that, while his primary goal of campaigning is simply speaking to as many students as possible, his team stood out because they were offering students answers, rather than only asking them questions. “If you were to look at our
campaign points, they’re all concrete and feasible. It’s all the steps that we need to take, everything is clear, it’s not about fluff talk,” he said. “We want to know what [the students] want but at the end of the day we need to propose solutions and see what the course of action is for next year. I think that’s our main strength.” The two slates have differed in their campaigning practices as well. For example, while Action’s presidential candidate Khalil Haddad and his teammates can often be seen hanging around the mezzanine chatting with students on their way to or from class, Your Concordia’s leader Lex Gill said her slate had intentionally taken a step away from traditional tactics, including what she referred to as essentially “spamming” people. “It’s important for us to maintain some presence there but we don’t feel like we win any sort of meaningful support by screaming at people in the hall or creating tunnels of our candidates so that they’re forced to walk through,” Gill said. “So we’re trying to move away from that as well. It’s not a football game, it’s an election.” Both groups have also maintained a continuous presence online, each staying active on Facebook and their respective websites. The Your Concordia team has posted three videos for their campaign to team Action’s two. But the former stands out for its use of a blog, on which it posts and responds to student’s suggestions and questions as collected in person or in a section of their website called the idea generator. While the CSU’s past elections have been known to be riddled with political attacks and cheating, this year chief electoral officer Oliver Cohen has
See “CEO, Action presi...” on p.5
Student groups ready to fight gov’t on tuition
Jacques Gallant Assistant news editor
Student unions from across Quebec are telling the Charest government that if it doesn’t back down from increasing tuition by $325 a year between 2012 and 2017, it should get ready for a showdown with students. The widely expected increase was included in the Quebec budget tabled on March 17 by finance minister Raymond Bachand. It represents a 75 per cent increase in tuition fees and will see the cost of university climb to $3,793 a year by 2017, still lower than the national average. According to Bachand, additional public funding, including more money from students, will give universities an extra $850 million by 2017. A third of the tuition increases, representing about $118 million, will go toward student financial aid. But student groups are contesting Bachand’s argument that students must do their part in closing the funding gap between Quebec universities and its counterparts in the rest of the country. The Fédération étudiante universitaire du Québec says asking for an additional $325 a year means more students will be forced to reject post-secondary education. “Asking students to pay more means students will have to work more, which will harm their studies, and also means that many students will be forced to leave school altogether,” said FEUQ president Louis-Philippe Savoie. “Tuition increases
See “Fees to go up...” on p.3
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