THE Varsity Vol. CXXXII, No. 21
University of Toronto’s Student Newspaper Since 1880
12 March, 2011
Team Unity sweeps to victory Bernarda Gospic/THe VArsity
StudentsFirst, Tanoli lose by a wide margin Munib Sajjad
Abigail Cudjoe
Shaun Shepherd
Simon Bredin ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR
Team Unity emerged victorious in Friday’s preliminary election results, but for their opponents, the end of the election battle could be weeks away. Current UTSU VP external Shaun Shepherd is set to replace president Danielle Sandhu. Independent presidential candidate Rohail Tanoli received slightly more votes than StudentsFirst candidate Brent Schmidt, but even with their votes combined, the two candidates would still have lost to Shepherd. The rest of Shepherd’s executive team was also elected by a wide margin. Corey Scott will return to his post as VP internal and services. The other newly elected executive members are Noor Baig (equity), Abigail Cudjoe (external), and Munib Sajjad (university affairs). Positions on the board of directors were split between Team Unity and independent candidates. Eight Team Unity candidates were acclaimed to their positions. After the UTSU elections’ highest appeal board, the Elections and Referenda Appeals Committee, reinstated Unity candidates to the race on Thursday night, Ali Mustafa Bello, Baliqis Hashiru, and Khalid Khan eked out narrow victories at New College. Non-Unity candidates, meanwhile, claimed victories at St. Michael’s College and Trinity College. Though Team Unity won the election, it has emerged battered and openly derided in arenas of student politics like Twitter and Facebook. One Facebook note posted by Team Unity during the campaign attracted over 100 lengthy, angry responses. Following the lead of a fake Twitter account used to censure opposition figure Brett Chang, several other fake accounts cropped up over the week to mock everyone from StudentsFirst to Team Unity. Even though the ballots have already been counted, discontented opposition supporters who allege that the election was conducted unfairly continue to lodge formal complaints with the CRO. A significant backlog of these complaints, appeals, and re-appeals could mean that a final conclusion to the events of the campaign may be weeks away. Although they continue to seek resolution through established means, the opposition is also taking matters into its own hands. Following their initial frustrations with the decisions made by chief returning officer Daniel Lo, opposition supporters have been compiling a databank of evidence pointing towards alleged infractions overlooked by Lo. On Saturday night, they began to leak their evidence through a Facebook page created for that express purpose entitled “Unity Dirty Tricks.” The group had existed briefly during the campaign but was taken down over fears that Lo would penalize StudentsFirst candidates already teetering on the edge of disqualification.
“Results” CONTINUED P3
Executive Election Results President: 4739
Shaun Shepherd— 2723 Brent Schmidt — 755 Rohail Tanoli — 1020 Spoiled — 241
57.6% 15.9% 21.5% 5.0%
Internal & services: 4721
Corey Scott — 2945 Dylan Moore — 1453 Spoiled — 323
62.4% 30.8% 6.8%
University affairs: 4721
Munib Sajjad — 2936 Carmen Reilly — 1431 Spoiled — 354
62.2% 30.3% 7.5%
External: 4707
Abigail Cudjoe — 2994 Alex Ripley — 1334 Spoiled — 379
63.6% 28.3% 8.1%
Equity: 4734
Noor Baig — 3056 Karthy Chin — 1297 Spoiled — 381
64.6% 27.4% 8.0%
Noor Baig
Corey Scott
Contradicting rulings invite scrutiny Unity candidates disqualified then re-qualified in committee tug-of-war Simon Bredin ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR
In a dizzying turn of events, 22 Team Unity board of directors candidates were briefly disqualified Thursday, then re-qualified hours later by two separate election committees. Though the disqualified candidates won their seats the next day, the controversial rulings brought both committees under close scrutiny. Disqualified then re-qualified The Elections and Referenda Committee (ERC) overturned rulings made by embattled chief returning officer Daniel Lo Thursday morning, leading to 21 demerit points across the board to Team Unity. The swath of demerits given to the slate meant that as polls remained open Thursday, 22 of their 26 candidates were technically disqualified. The threshold for disqualification for most board of directors (BOD) positions is 20 points, while at-large candidates require 30 points and executives 35 points. All disqualified members were running for BOD positions. Unity was punished for making misleading statements on the campaign trail. The committee found the slate’s claim of having increased clubs funding false as it actually decreased by more than $5,000. Also, the ERC proclaimed that Unity didn’t “[win] an interest-free period on OSAP for 6 months after graduation,” unlike what was stated on their website.
“Demerits” CONTINUED P3