March 13, 2017

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Vol. CXXXVII, No. 21 March 13 , 2017 thevarsity.ca —— The University of Toronto’s Student Newspaper Since 1880

UTSU elections coverage News: CUPE 1281: The union representing UTSU staff, explained page 4 Joshua Hands’ absentee bid for the presidency page 5 Reboot slate under fire for online conduct page 5

NATHAN CHAN/THE VARSITY

Candidates for UTSU elections face off at executive forum

ERC debate style leaves little room for discussion, critics say page 5

Tuition, slates, marginalized groups discussed during contentious debate Danielle Mulima, Josie Kao, Lesley Flores, Kaitlyn Simpson Varsity Contributor, Varsity Staff, & Associate News Editor

On Wednesday, March 8, all but one of the executive candidates for the University of Toronto Students’ Election spoke at the UTSU Executive Debate to discuss some of the most pressing issues facing the union. The event was moderated by Chief Returning Officer (CRO) Bridgette Dalima for the first half and the anti-harassment officer Ellie Ade Kur for the second half. The four slates debating were Demand Better UofT, We The Students, Reboot UofT, and Whomst’d’ve UofT. Anne Boucher, an independent candidate running for the position of Vice-President External, also participated in the event. Independent presidential candidate Joshua Hands did not attend the forum. Tuition Many of the questions posed to the candidates were in regards to what they would do about rising tuition fees in Ontario. Carina Zhang, who is running for VicePresident University Affairs with We The Students, affirmed her slate’s commitment to free tuition, saying, “We The Students aim to fight for free tuition for everyone, including domestic students as well as international students [sic].” The other slates were focused on capping rather than lowering tuition, and many of the candidates emphasized their desire to hear

from students and get them involved in lobbying for lower tuition. Josie Wu of Demand Better, who is running for Vice-President University Affairs, said, “We want to work on having a cap on international student fee instead of just yelling outside asking for free tuition and wanting to make a visible plan [sic].” Speaking for Reboot, Nadine Abd El Razek, who is running for Vice-President External, explained how she doesn’t feel that students are hearing enough about the issues. “Our slate has a pretty good network in the municipal and provincial government… so we hope to use those connections to kind of get a better position. But I feel that it would first come from the students, and in order to make that happen we have to actually let the students know what’s happening,” she said. Saarthak Saxena, who is running with the Whomst’d’ve slate for Vice-President University Affairs, stated that his slate is “looking to decrease the rate at which Governing Council increases the rate of tuition, and that’ll be from lobbying… I think we could reach out to UofT, hopefully, we’re not very good at that.” Existence of Slates Demand Better, We The Students, and Whomst’d’ve presidential candidates all agreed that slates are problematic and should not exist, whereas the Reboot candidate said that slates need to become institutionalized parties. Andre Fast, with We The Students, said that the slate system makes the election

process inaccessible to many students on campus. Fast said that students should be consulted on the issue, but he supports making “elections accessible to the most people.” Micah Ryu, with Reboot, said that parties should be institutionalized in order to make the electoral process more accessible. He stated that currently it is difficult to join slates unless you are an insider, but parties allow independent people to run in a party’s primary race. Ryu claimed that with individual focused elections, “the individuals who already have the name recognition will continue to establish themselves further within the system.” Mathias Memmel, with Demand Better, said that slates are “toxic” and should be banned. Slates, according to him, “support those who have agency already and have power.” He believes that the slate system is not able to best represent the interests of students. In response to institutionalizing parties, Memmel stated that it was “probably one of the worst ideas I’ve heard in a very long time.” He said that by institutionalizing parties, the UTSU will continue to be run by groups of insiders and to be inaccessible to individual students. UTSU and Advocacy The presidential candidates were also asked about their stances on the UTSU performing advocacy work. Memmel believes “100 per cent... that the UTSU needs to make advocacy one of its core mandate.” Debate, page 4

Editorial: Student politicians should hold themselves to a higher standard of professionalism and cooperation page 9

Science: A student’s perspective on how the incoming exec should change the Health and Dental Plan page 16

Watch The Varsity’s presidential debate live on our Facebook page Monday at 7:30 pm

From a kid who lost his sense of self to an adult navigating the management of his mental illness; the harrowing state of mental health care in Ontario told by a student with bipolar disorder Feature — Page 10


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