The Concordian

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theconcordian

sports life

Men’s basketball headed to nationals P.18

Leaving Libya: a personal tale of being extracted from Tripoli P. 7

VP Pudwell quits ... leaving behind a trail of questions

Letters P. 20 Tuesday, March 8, 2011

arts History, mythology, religion and camp all in one exhibit P. 10

music Andrew W.K. brings the party to Concordia P. 17

opinions Happy Int’l Women’s Day! How to get more women elected P. 20 Volume 28 Issue 23

CSU VP Morgan Pudwell resigns, calls out executive’s actions Remaining execs suggest Pudwell may have resigned for political reasons Evan LePage News editor Morgan Pudwell, VP sustainability and promotions for the CSU, has resigned, marking the fourth resignation of a CSU executive this academic year. In her letter of resignation, sent out to CSU councillors, student media and other members of the Concordia community late last Thursday, Pudwell wrote “The union continues to move in a direction that directly conflicts with my values and this is a path that I cannot support.” The remaining members of the executive have offered a different reason as to why they believe she resigned, however. “If she felt all this stuff from the beginning, why is she saying this a week before elections are happening?” said CSU president Heather Lucas. “Why not in January? Why not right before the new semester begins? The timing is very sketchy.” VP Loyola and Advocacy Hassan Abdullahi elaborated, saying “Ultimately, it is an opinion of ours that the series of unfortunate events that have occurred starting with her resignation are politically motivated ones. “We feel that the CSU is being used as a battleground for petty politics, and as the CSU executives we’re duty-bound to uphold the integrity of the CSU so it does not get mingled into such behaviour,” he continued.

Pudwell agreed that it was politically motivated, “in the sense that this is an important time of year for students to start thinking about representation on campus and I think it’s important they know what representation has been pretending to be this year.” As for running, she would only say that she wanted to get involved in some way to make sure students interests were represented at Concordia, but that she had no plans as of yet. But as for her reasons for resigning, Pudwell reiterated that her confidence in the executive had been declining since the student centre campaign in November, and said that an executive meeting last Wednesday really sealed her decision to resign. “They basically went around the table and said they didn’t trust me,” she explained. “They went around the table and said they didn’t think I did my job and [...] they sort of criticized my involvement with other student leaders on campus.” Lucas presented a very different picture of that meeting, saying that “We had basically hashed everything out; we had talked about our issues that we had, and we talked very frankly and openly, and there was no indication about her resigning or her leaving the team.” “She was a part of the team; we considered her a part of the team. She was a part of the family,” she added. But the feeling wasn’t shared. “I think it got so bad that I couldn’t address it in any other way but resigning,” Pudwell said. “As much as I tried to say that this is a two-way street and we should all be working on things, it sort of always felt like it was everyone against me.” What started off as a group of eight executives has dwindled down to a group of five, and one that

See “Student centre...” on p.5

CSU ‘inactive’ in tuition fight: student activists Jacques Gallant Assistant news editor

With just days left before more than 150 unions and other organizations march at Place du Canada against tuition hikes and privatization, the Concordia Student Union is being criticized for failing to mobilize its members in the lead-up to Saturday’s event. Although CSU VP external and projects Adrien Severyns described mobilizing the students as ‘paramount’ in an email last week, People’s Campus Coalition member Alex Matak said that the CSU is being far from helpful in pushing this Saturday’s march. “Unfortunately, it’s no surprise,” said Matak, one of the organizers of WHALE last Feb. 14, which saw close to 1,000 Concordia students denounce tuition increases and the university administration’s lack of transparency. “Most student organizers who were working with CSU executives in planning WHALE found out that, except for [former VP sustainability and promotions] Morgan Pudwell who was a major exception to this, the executive has no real knowledge or passion for the student movement.” Pudwell, who resigned from her position late last Thursday night, was also the only member of the executive whose name was included

See “Student union...” on p.3

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