The Concordian

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theconcordian

festivals sports

Our guide to the summer’s best fests. Arts & Music P. 11, 15

Former Stingers win top prize in women’s hockey P. 19

Commentary P. 20 Tuesday, April 5, 2011

life Recent grads struggling to find a place in the workforce P. 7

arts Photographer shows 2009 Iranian elections from his point of view P. 12

opinions North Africa’s revolution defies the continent’s political and cultural history P. 21 Volume 28 Issue 27

Record voter turnout at CSU elections despite roadblocks

Your Concordia wins by 336 votes Jacqueline Di Bartolomeo News editor

While some concerns about violations during this year’s Concordia Student Union elections have yet to be resolved, last week’s voter turnout suggests that the intense faceoffs between the two slates may not have been entirely negative. With a total of 5,910 ballots cast, turnout nearly doubled compared to last year, when about 3,200 students voted. Winning slate Your Concordia pulled through with a 336-vote margin of victory over its opponent Action, a difference of a little under six percent. The difference represents a big turnaround from last year, when Fusion steamrollered opposing slate Community with 73 per cent of the votes. Your Concordia also beat Action in most CSU council races, including a clean sweep of the arts and science seats, two of the three engineering seats and all three fine arts seats. Both their board candidates AJ West and Laura Beach were elected, as were senators Andy Filipowich, Tina Salameh and Bilal Hamideh. Action won all six JMSB council seats as well as the JMSB senate seat. President-elect Lex Gill attributed their win to being able to aggressively reach out to students. “Our campaign got a lot of people out to vote who wouldn’t normally vote,” Gill said. “Progressive students at Concordia haven’t had a really good reason to vote in years [and] Loyola often gets kind of neglected in this whole process. I think we did our best to reach out to

them and that mattered.” While she had felt throughout campaigning that Your Concordia had strong support with arts and science and fine arts students, Gill was surprised to see how the tables turned in their favour as the counters began to open boxes and tally votes. “It was clear that for every 50 votes we got, [Action was] getting between 25 and 30,” she said. “It was overwhelmingly in our favour.” During Thursday night’s ballot counting, Gill asked chief electoral officer Oliver Cohen to count the ballots from the MB building separately because of misgivings she had about Action candidates’ behaviour there. However, she said the ballots ended up being mixed in with the others because of time constraints. Action’s presidential candidate Khalil Haddad, who described the loss as “unfortunate,” also had concerns about procedures at the polling stations. “One thing that was of great concern and very worrying was the fact that polling clerks had mistakenly given multiple ballots to students throughout the polling period,” he said. “We found about five ballots that had almost identical markings and were stuck together.” He added that the multiple ballots were voided when noticed. As such, Haddad thinks there is room for improvement in the elections process, and recommended looking into online voting after having assessed “the potential security risk.” Haddad added that although Action filed several contestations throughout the election, the CEO did not act on any of them. He pointed out his concern about post-campaigning within Your Concordia as well. “Your Concordia clearly violated rules by flyering the Loyola library and bombarding the bathroom stalls

See “Your Concordia...” on p. 3

Gill planning major policy changes Jacqueline Di Bartolomeo News editor

After an election fraught with allegations of campaign violations flying left and right, presidentelect Lex Gill plans on instituting major reforms to clean up the process. “By the June council meeting, we’d like to have a series of reforms presented,” she said. “We want to do this while it’s still fresh in everyone’s minds that this election was a really difficult process. There were a lot of problems with it and we want to move forward and change these [regulations].” Since Action candidates were seen roaming around polling stations and allegations surfaced that they were telling students to vote for them, Gill said that they were looking at making the standing regulations “way tighter and way more explicit about what can and can’t be done during the polling period, [and] what can and can’t be done during the campaign period.” Gill said the new executive also wants to look at “empowering electoral officers and deputy electoral officers to enforce sanctions that have meaning.” She asserted that because electoral officers want to remain unbiased, they sometimes hesitate to dole out sanctions. She also singled out the slate system as in need of reform. “The relationship between the executive and council slates [...] might be problematic and it might be something that we want to separate just for broader principles of democracy at the union,” she said.

See “First up on the ne..” on p.5

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