2015 Elections

Friday, March 9, 2012

Campaign Wrap Up

In case you have been living under a rock, Jordan and KaLeigh won and officially became the President and Vice President Elect of NISG. The voting distribution was almost identical to last week’s initial contest, with Jordan & KaLeigh besting Kyle & Brendan by a little more than 200 votes. With the congratulations and thank yous pouring out from all candidates, it’s time for NISG to give our own shout outs.


Trevor and Beth
I tried to have as much fun with “The Cult” as possible, and hopefully you and your fellow residents did too. After this election, though, I walk away with more respect for Campbell Hall than ever. I think that what both of you have done, and are doing, is incredible. You command the attention and undying respect for a massive amount of people that just love UNI. What more could I ask for out of a student? Thank you Trevor, Beth, and the rest of Campbell Hall for renewing my spirits in this university. Don’t be strangers to NISG.  You both have skills and ideas that this university needs.


Kyle and Brendan
You guys rock, plain and simple.  How you managed to be full time students, run at a D1 level, and give up your entire lives at the same time is remarkable. You have a chemistry between each other that was unmatched by the other candidates. The results last night might not have gone you way, but UNI needs them to stick around and follow through on campaign ideas. 


Jordan & KaLeigh
What more can I say? You put together a campaign, platform, and group of supporters that was unmatched by the competition. Congratulations. There is no doubt in my mind that you will be very successful next year. Just remember, winning was the easy part. The next 13 months of your lives will be hectic, challenging, and maybe even frustrating. However, you’re not alone. You have 14,000 students behind you; just let us know how we can help.


Senate Candidates
No matter if you won or lost, make Senate your passion. Senate can pass resolutions that the upper administration of the university will listen to. Don’t just show up to committee meetings and senate meetings and assume your work is done. The majority of your involvement in Senate needs to occur outside of official meetings; talking with students, brainstorming ideas, and spending time in the NISG Office. I’m really excited to see what this new Senate is capable of, don’t let me or the student body down.


Election Commission
Fantastic job. I think you handled the accusations of early campaigning well and results were quick. Good elections have little Commission involvement, so I like to think that this election was wildly successful .

Finally, and most importantly, is to the students that voted. THANK YOU. These are difficult times for UNI. We need students like you to care about the state of UNI. As I mentioned Monday, respect the vote and respect Jordan & KaLeigh. Make sure to answer their call and help them make a united attack at the budget cuts.

Jeff and I have had so much fun covering the 2012 NISG Elections, thanks for making the choice to stay informed. Catch ya on the flip side.
-Chris & Jeff

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

BREAKING NEWS: JORDAN AND KALEIGH WIN

The Final Results are in and Jordan & KaLeigh  have been declared the new President and Vice President elect of the the Northern Iowa Student Government. The final tally was

Jordan and KaLeigh:772
Kyle and Brendan: 541

Stay tuned to the blog as we analyze everything over the next 48 hours.

BREAKING NEWS: THE RESULTS ARE IN

We'll let you know when Jill tells us them

Kyle and Brendan are Letting the Sidewalk do the Chalking

The great weather has made way for candidates to do some chalking as advertising. Today alone, I've gotten three texts about how much Kyle & Brendan chalking has been on campus. Although I've heard rumors of sandwich boards being used by Jordan & KaLeigh, I think that this chalking campaign might be the most effective method of communication on election day. Reading "Vote for Kyle and Brendan" 30 times each time crossing campus is a powerful message. 

Stay tuned to the live blog tonight at 7 as we find out if it works, and who ultimately takes the NISG office for the 2012-2013 academic year.






Monday, March 5, 2012

The 2012 NISGElections.com Endorsement

At the beginning of this campaign season Jeff and I had two goals: the first was to provide accurate coverage of the 2012 NISG Elections, and the second was to provide our readers our honest opinions of the campaign. Over the past couple of weeks we’ve had a lot of talks with each other over which candidates we liked in the elections, and ultimately who would receive this blog’s endorsement. Finally, we have made our decision. Based on what we’ve seen out of all the candidates in the past three weeks, NISGElections.com is proud to announce our endorsement of : the losers (and their supporters) of the 2012 NISG Elections.

Now before you start angrily tweeting and commenting, let us explain.

Over the past few weeks, the UNI student body has seen three sets of presidential and vice presidential candidates give up their entire lives in hopes of representing the students. In addition, 18 students appeared on the ballot for senate. Each candidate brought new ideas and unique styles to the campaign. UNI would be lucky to have either of the three tickets take office in April. NISG would be lucky to have any of the 18 senate candidates serve on senate, too. Based on this, one thing became abundantly clear to us. The next NISG president and senate are going to be successful. However, with the limited number of seats, there are many qualified and motivated students missing out on NISG spots. We feel that their continued involvement in student leadership is the key to the success of those who won.

Losing hurts, a lot, especially in elections. Finding out that your name was less preferred to another name is the worst. It also stings to find out that the candidate you dedicated hours of time to support lost. However, it’s in the wake of defeat that true character shines. 

I’m not ignorant to defeat, either. Over the years I’ve been rejected for three upper level cabinet positions. While each one seems to have hurt more than the one before it, each one opened the door for a new opportunity. Much like the losing candidates now, I felt upset, deflated and even angry. However, the worst thing I could have done in the aftermath was to give up on being a student leader at UNI. After my most recent rejection a very wise person told me, “When you put yourself out there, Chris, failure is part of the game. You can’t let it define you.”

That’s my advice to those who walk away from the 2012 NISG Elections in defeat. Whether you’re a candidate or die-hard supporter, don’t let this defeat define you. Ask yourself, “Why did I run? Why did I care enough to put so much time into this?” Then use the answer as motivation to keep going. Use your frustration to motivate you to work harder. If you think the student body made the wrong choice, spend all next year proving it. Be the presidential or senatorial candidate that people think, “how in the hell did they lose that election?” The worst thing the losing candidates and supporters can do is give up on NISG and UNI.

To the losing presidential tickets, don’t give up on owning this campus. Make sure the winning ticket implements your ideas. Better yet, join their cabinet and make your ideas happen on your own. To the losing senatorial candidates; join the senate standing committees, attend senate meetings and make sure your senators provide the best representation possible. More importantly, to the losing supporters, respect the vote and support the winners. Chances are, you’ll find out that they aren’t so ideologically different from you. In these times for UNI, the student body needs to come together.

To the winners, congratulations. Take some time and enjoy your victory. Then, call those who lost and ask for their help. Winning was the easy part. You’re going to need as much help as you can get to do a good job.

NISGElections.com is proud to endorse the losing candidates and supporters of the 2012 NISGElections. We believe their continued involvement in NISG will be the key difference between a good term and a great term. The president and senate can’t do it alone.

The Runoff is Looming

With the runoff looming, all has seemed quiet on the election front. Let's first take a look at the Facebook pages.

Kyle & Brendan: 262
Jordan & KaLeigh: 201

Although they still sit on top, Kyle & Brendan haven't gotten any new likes in the past few days. Meanwhile, Jordan & KaLeigh have increased their number by 25+. Is this a sign of where Trevor & Beth supporters are leaning to? Possibly. But keep in mind that Trevor's endorsement will affect his supporter's vote the most.

 I also took some time this weekend to ask the candidates some questions and here is what they responded with.

What have you been doing since the results were announced?
Kyle
“We have been working on making sure that students know about the runoff election and that they need to vote again. Being the underdog going into this election, we know that having a high level of repeat voter turnout is vital. We have also followed up with student groups that we had met with the past couple weeks, as well as set up appointments to meet with student groups that we did not get a chance to meet with before the last election”

How do you plan on getting some of those who voted for Trevor & Beth to vote for your respective ticket?
Jordan
“Our thought process wasn’t, “Okay, we have a 250+ vote lead over Kyle and Brendan, how do we retain that and possibly expand it?” But instead we’ve been thinking about this as an entirely new election, a clean slate if you will. One of the things we’ve done, changing it up a bit, is going to house meetings. Setting up meetings to go to student organizations takes too much time to really be effective in a six-day time frame, so we decided that going to house and hall meetings were the best way to get to new students.

What’s the big thing you want students to know about your ticket going into the final runoff election?
Jordan
“We want to thank everyone that has supported us through his entire process and we hope for their continued support. We would also like students to think about not only the platforms, but which candidates they would feel could best work through the current events.”
Kyle
“We are dedicated to serving the students of UNI and we believe that this campaign proves that dedication. Over the past couple weeks, we have placed this campaign as a priority over our other activities, social lives, and school work. We understand this position comes with a great deal of responsibility and that sacrifice and stress are to be expected. Throughout our time at UNI, we have gained the experience and skills necessary to not only fill the position, but do an excellent job. We are honored to have as much support from the students that we’ve had thus far and ask that they please vote for us again his coming Tuesday and Wednesday. We would love to be the voice of the students and help lead this university, but need your support to make that happen.”


Be sure to stay tuned for the NISGElections blog as we cover the runoff AND make an official endorsement later tonight!

Thursday, March 1, 2012

BREAKING NEWS: Trevor Monnier Endorses Kyle and Brendan

While I was still writing out my reaction to last night's results, a HUGE development has been made in the runoff election for student body president. Former student body presidental candidate Trevor Monnier has officially endorsed Kyle & Brendan. I got the chance to talk to Trevor and he had this to say:

"It goes back to the reasons why I ran in the first place. Kyle and Brendan have a solid foundation built on their principals and morals that I think is necessary for our student leaders. In addition, their public speaking skills are excellent, which is necessary to effectively represent the university. They posses the skills that I want from a student body president."


He goes on to compare them to Jordan & KaLeigh

"I feel that Kyle and Brendan are running a more honest campaign. Their platform has honest ideas and only includes things that are feasible. I can't say the same for Jordan and KaLeigh. They [Jordan and KaLeigh] are making a lot of promises to student organizations that I don't think they can follow through on."


A lot of things have come as a surprise to me in NISG, but this one takes the cake. Less than 24 hours after being eliminated (by 19 votes no less) Trevor has come out swinging for Kyle & Brendan. Not only did Trevor endorse Kyle & Brendan, but he also delivered some blows to Jordan & KaLeigh. Up until that comment, this campaign has been completely positive. Part of me likes that, but there is also another part that wishes the candidates would engage with each other (like Trevor just did). Either way, the bigger point is that Trevor has officially endorsed Kyle & Brendan.

This is huge news that has a profound impact on next week's runoff election. Trevor convinced 531 students that he was the best choice as Student Body President. His endorsement means a lot of votes for Kyle & Brendan. These are votes that Kyle & Brendan really needed to make up the nearly 250-vote advantage Jordan & KaLeigh had.

Last night, Jordan and KaLeigh proved me wrong and showed that they were the true frontrunners. They got 41.7% of the vote and had nearly 250 more votes than Kyle & Brendan. I was prepared to write this morning that it was their election to lose, and that they are heavily favored. Now, I'm not as sure. I'll be interested to see how Jordan & KaLeigh respond to this and move their campaign forward from here.

We don't know the impact of this endorsement yet, but it has the potential to catapult Kyle & Brendan into first place come next Wednesday night. One thing is for certain, this run off election will be *very* close. I'm nearly positive that the difference will come down to less than 100 votes. I'm not sure the last time NISG has seen such a close race for student body president. Be sure stay tuned to the blog as we cover everything.

Results!

Below are the results from last night's election.


President and Vice President
Jordan Bancroft Smith & KaLeigh White: 814
Kyle Burns and Brendan Thompson: 550
Trevor Monnier and Beth Monnier: 531
*a runoff has been announced for next week between Jordan&KaLeigh and Kyle&Brendan

College of Business Administration (3 seats)
Tyler Moran: 234***Elected***
Thomas Madsen: 200***Elected***
Patrick Gibbs: 31***Elected***

College of Humanities Arts and Sciences (5 seats)
Blake Findley: 379 ***Elected***
Alicia Jessip: 348 ***Elected***
Jordan Leckband: 343 ***Elected***
Jordan Wilmes: 315 ***Elected***
Tucker Olson: 314 ***Elected***
Christina Johsnon: 294
Stacy Lynne Howes: 239
Connor Hudson Ave: 192
Colombo the Parrot: 25


College of Social and Behavioral Sciences (3 seats)
David Pope: 172 ***Elected***
Margaret Nervig: 113 ***Elected***
Jared Parker: 112 ***Elected***
Andrew Miller: 107
Eric Boisen: 89
Devin Davis: 77



Graduate College (3 seats)
Vincent Chukwuemka: 58 ***Elected***
Chase Felchi: 44 ***Elected***
Keenan Crow: 17 ***Elected***


College of Education (3 seats)
Justin Stout: 3 ***Elected***
Kristin Eckman: 2 ***Elected***
1 COE Seat is OPEN

Interdisciplinary, General Studies, Deciding 
Robert Oman: 3 ***Elected***
Raychel Garringer: 1 ***Elected***


Wednesday, February 29, 2012

LIVE VIDEO BLOG

In case you can't make it to the Union tonight, the NISG blog team will be covering the announcement. Starting at 7pm we'll be talking about how the campaign has gone, interview the candidates, and give our predictions for results.

Heres the link:

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

VOTE

After two weeks of campaigning, voting finally begins. Ballots were officially posted at 6 this morning. Make sure to go to myUNIverse and cast your ballot for Student Body President and Vice President. I just cast my ballot, and it took around 30 seconds. So head to the Union voting stations, or just get on your computer. VOTE.



Monday, February 27, 2012

The Final Push


With less than 15 hours before voting officially begins, we’re at the final push for each of the candidates. Last night, I attended meetings where both Trevor and Jordan made appearances, which means that I’ve seen all three tickets speak at a student organization. In all 3 meetings, the presidential tickets were quite strong. Each commanded the attention of the room and spoke with authority. These are good qualities and signs that no matter who wins, UNI students will be lucky enough to have a representative that truly cares about the position.

All three tickets have now sponsored Facebook Events to vote for them. Let’s take a look at the overall count for these groups and for the pages they all created on the first day of campaigning.

Kyle & Brendan Page Likes: 261 Event: 81
Jordan & KaLeigh Page Likes: 189  Event: 159    
Trevor & Beth Page Likes: 131  Event:  92

Keep in mind the difference between these two types of Facebook counts. With a Facebook Page, it’s harder to get a massive amount of likes because users can’t invite people to like it. Or at least, they won’t be notified regarding their invitation. Facebook Events, however, are much different. When someone is invited to an event they are immediately notified that someone invited them and can easily give their RSVP. Page likes typically come from students that are actively following the campaign. The casual student that isn’t following this blog or the campaign most likely isn’t going to click a like button, or even be aware of it’s existence. Usually, the students that like the pages and follow the campaign are the ones that persuade the casual students into voting for a particular candidate.

That being said, I’m really confused with the numbers above. Kyle & Brendan are handsomely winning the “like” race. Typically, that’s a good indication of the number of supporters they have that are passionate about their ticket. However, they’re struggling in the event count. Although their event went up days after Trevor & Beth’s and hours after Jordan & KaLeigh’s, I expected a much bigger count given their Page success.

It’s possible that this event count is just a fluke. Maybe it’s because they invited nearly half as much as the other tickets, or that their supporters simply haven’t checked Facebook since 10:45 last night. However, if I’m Kyle & Brendan, I’m not going to rely on the above two reasons. It’s possible that this marks a turning of the tide. Joel’s endorsement and the vigorous campaigning that we’ve seen out of Jordan & KaLeigh’s camp might be catching up to them. Kyle & Brendan need to address this, and try reaching more students before voting starts tomorrow.

With the Facebook tallies unclear at the moment, one thing is clear. All three candidates are on a full out sprint to the finish line. Trevor & Beth are giving out Scratch cupcakes tonight, all 3 candidates have a presence in the Union, and I’d expect that none will get too much sleep over the next 72 hours.
Stay tuned to the NISGelections.com blog for more analysis and announcements. Soon, we’ll post information to access our LIVE video blog of election night.

Friday, February 24, 2012

Last Night’s Endorsement and How the Race is Shaping Up

In case you missed it, former Student Body President Joel Anderson endorsed Jordan & KaLeigh. He cites their NISG experience and job readiness, "if it started today". Among other things, he also touched on the difficulties of the position as student body president, which is something I hope all 3 candidates take to heart.

So how important is Joel's endorsement? Joel was and continues to be the strongest student leader on campus. He's well respected by the faculty and even more by his fellow students, indicated by the fact that he was unchalleneged in his bid for Student Body President. I'm lucky enough to be a member of many organizations with Joel and can say that his reputation is very real. Particularly in CATS and Sigma Phi Epsilon, his opinion matters and he has changed both organizations for the better.

How does this affect each ticket? Obviously, this was a huge boost for Jordan and KaLeigh. Their ticket has been touting NISG experience throughout this campaign and has it's support coming primarly from NISG'ers. Joel's endorsement solidifies that Jordan and KaLeigh are the choice of NISG insiders.

While the news hurts Trevor & Beth and Kyle & Brendan, it's not cause to abandon ship. I've said it from day one and I'm going to continue to say it, Trevor & Beth have The Cult behind them. Their campaign was created within the walls of Campbell Hall, and I am not convinced that the opinion of a non-Cult member will matter too much. Expect them to handily win the 300-400 Cult votes that will be cast. Where this hurts them is outside of Campbell. 300-400 votes will not be enough to win, or make it to a run off. Trevor and Beth need other places to garner votes, and this endorsement makes that task much more difficult.

As far as Kyle & Brendan go, this endorsement slows their roll a bit. Although they don't have many NISG'ers behind them, they are quietly becoming front runners. They have a handsome lead in the Facebook group count, beating the other tickets with 255 "likes" (the other tickets have yet to crack 200). Remember, having NISG behind you doesn't mean an automatic victory. Ask 2008 winners Cezar-Lobdell whose opinion really matters, they'll probably tell you this.

Ultimately I think this endorsement puts Jordan & KaLeigh on the same level as Kyle & Brendan, with Trevor & Beth lurking closely behind. This election is going to be a tight one. In the end, I think it comes down to who wants it more. Which candidate is willing to stand outside asking for votes from 8am-10pm on election days? The bell lap of this campaign season is here. Stay tuned to the NISGelections blog as we break down the final pushes, voting, and the announcment.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

College of Social and Behavioral Sciences Senate Race

We continue our coverage of the NISG Senate race with candidate profiles for the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences

Andrew Miller
Classification: Senior
Major: Political Science and Public Administration
Other activities: VP of Political Science Society, American Democracy Project, Center for Internaional Peace and Security Studies, One Iowa, Northern Iowa Democrats, Wellness and Recreation Student Advisory Board

3 Goals if Elected
1. Make the New York Times permanently available for students
2. Push for tuition-offset grants for Iowa Board of Regents students to address student loan debts.
3. Create a more functional NISG website by means of hiring an additional webmaster and increased budget.

David Pope
Classification: Sophomore
Major: Political Communication
Other Activities:  Executive member of UNI Proud, UNI Feminist Action League, UNI Transgenda, Women's History Month Committee, and Occupy Cedar Valley

3 Goals if Elected
1. Establishing an LGBT center on campus that could provide institutional support for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender students.
2. Extend and expand diversity and cultural competency training for all UNI faculty and staff so they know how to interact with people of all sexualities, gender identities, races, and ethnic backgrounds.
3. Push NISG to take a stronger stance against tuition increases

Eric Boisen
Classification: Freshman
Major: Political Science
Other Activities: UNI Men's Glee Club and Vocal AmmUNItion

3 Goals if Elected
1. Try to keep students on campus on the weekends
2. Make the funding process easier for students
3. Be transparent with CSBS students by having office hours and regularly listening to their concerns

Jared Parker (Incumbent, Current CSBS Senator)
Classification: Senior
Major: History and Political Science
Other Activities: Chair of NISG Governmental and Legislative Affairs Committee, Deputy Speaker, Pi Kappa Alpha, former President of UNI History Club, Knights of Columbus, Chair and Vice Chair of UNI College Republicans, IFC VP of Administration, Order of Omega, Pi Sigma Alpha, and Phi Alpha Theta

3 Goals if Elected
1. Push issues that benefit students such as a sales tax holiday for textbooks.
2. Ensure students are as politically active as possible
3. Push for generous, but fair, funding for student organizations

Devin Davis (Current Rider Hall Senator)
Classification: Junior
Major: Political Science and Psychology
Other Activities: NI Democrats, Students for Obama, and Model United Nations

3 Goals if Elected
1. More communication between NISG and the student body
2. Stronger relations between the state government and UNI
Although these are only two goals, they are broad, long term goals that I feel will take up the majority of my time as a senator.

Margaret Nervig
Classification: Senior
Major: History
Other Activities: UNIFI, Former President of UNI Harry Potter Club, History Club, Colleges Against Cancer- Team Recruitment, and studying abroad.

3 Goals if Elected
1. Make NISG more available to the student body
2. More assistance for new student organizations. Perhaps partner them with an existing organization to help them establish themselves.
3. Increased recycling efforts at Dashes and Cafe on the Way.

BREAKING NEWS: Former Student Body President Joel Anderson Endorses Jordan & KaLeigh


Greek Life and NISG

As a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon, the subject of Greek Life is something that is very near and dear to me.  I was glad to see that both Kyle and Brendan and Jordan and KaLeigh had sections in their platforms regarding Greek Life. At first, I was a little worried that they just included a plank on the subject to try to win votes from the Greeks on campus, since none of the candidates are actually Greek themselves. After reading through their platforms, I quickly realized that even though they are not Greek themselves, both tickets see the benefits of having Greek Life on campus and have a fairly good understanding of the state of Greek Life at UNI.

Kyle and Brendan’s platform touches on the importance of having a strong Greek community on campus and how it benefits the university. Their main goal with Greek Life is to increase collaboration and communication between the Greek community and NISG. To accomplish this they plan to continue the use of a Director of Greek Affairs - Fraternities and Director of Greek Affairs -Sororities.

Jordan and KaLeigh’s platform goes more in depth about the challenges facing the Greek community and their plans on overcoming these challenges. They also plan to continue the use of the Director of Greek Affairs position, but they want to make a change to the way this Director is selected. They would like to include Greek leaders in the selection process so that the most effective person for the job can be chosen.

During Monday’s debate, an excellent question was asked: “What is the outlook on Greek Life on Campus?” Kyle was the first to answer on this question. He pointed out that the Greek community at UNI is different than the Greek communities at the other state universities. Our Greek community is “small but mighty.” He then continued to point out the many ways Greek Life benefits campus and said that he wants to have better collaboration between NISG and the Greek community since Greeks are so involved on campus. It was clear that he had taken time to consider the position the Greek community is in and had thought about how to create a more mutually beneficial relationship between the Greek community and NISG. Trevor was the next person to answer the question. Now, even though Trevor and Beth did not include a Greek Life plank in their platform, it does not necessarily mean that it is something they haven’t thought about. During the debate they pointed out that they have a shorter platform than the other tickets because they only wanted to include items they believed they could actually accomplish if elected. Since it was not included in their platform, I was excited to hear their thoughts on Greek Life, but when Trevor answered the question, I could tell that it was something they hadn’t put much thought into. Trevor just said “Greek Life is great” and then proceeded to talk about how they support all student organizations that want to accomplish something. For me, this answer was a bit of a letdown. KaLeigh was the last candidate to get to address the question. For someone who isn’t Greek, she had a really good idea of what is going on in the Greek community. She pointed out how Greeks set a great example on campus through their involvement. Their ticket realizes that one of the biggest problems for the Greek community is their perceived isolation from the rest of the student body. They plan to help correct this issue by having NISG work with the Greek community more to support Greek goals and initiatives. 

I also believe that a closer relationship between NISG and the Greek community would benefit both parties. Regardless of who wins the election, I hope that the relationship between NISG and Greeks grows over the next year. I thoroughly encourage all Greeks to read the Greek Life sections of the tickets’ platforms and ask the candidates questions about their views on Greek Life in order to make an informed decision on election day.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The College of Humanities, Arts and Sciences Senate Race

We begin our coverage of the 2012 NISG Senate Race coverage with the largest and most competitive Senate race in recent NISG memory. In the College of Humanities, Arts, and Sciences, there are eight candidates (and one bird) vying for five spots. I asked the candidates to some preliminary questions in order to get some background information on them, and here is what I got.

Jordan Wilmes
Classification: Sophomore
Major: Biology
Other Involvement: Tri-Beta, American Chemical Society, and Honors Student Advisory Board.

3 Goals if Elected
1. Increase NISG awareness
2. Simplify the funding process
3. Work for healthier alternative food options in the dining centers

Blake Findley (Current Senator for the College of Education)
Classification: Junior
Major: Psychology & Spanish
Other Involvement: Campbell Hall President, Co-Chair for Leadership Development for the SLC, Vice-Chair of NISG Student Affairs Committee, and academic beat writer for the NI.

3 Goals if Elected
1. To perfect the funding process
2. Increase the lines of communication between the senate, executive branch, UNI faculty and staff, and, most importantly, the students
3. Work for more NISG outreach and programs such as the New York Times, Panther Picnic, and Voterpalooza

Tucker Olson
Classification: Junior
Major: Political Science and Spanish
Other Involvement: UNI Men’s Glee Club, UNI Proud, German Club, Honors Program, RHA, Sissy’s Sircus, Model United Nations, Culture and Intensive English Program, and Campbell Hall Senate

3 Goals if Elected
1. Increase involvement of those not traditionally represented in NISG including underclassmen, LGBT, racial minorities, veterans, and those with disabilities.
2. Lobby government officials to hear the UNI student body’s voice
3. Be official liaison to the College of Humanities, Arts, and Sciences with the administration and students.

Christina Johnson (Incumbent, Current Senator for College of Humanities, Arts, and Sciences)
Classification: Junior
Major: Spanish
Other Involvement: HSAB Programming Coordinator, President of International Court of Justice of Iowa High School Model United Nations, Director of UNI Model Team, and Sigma Delta Pi

3 Goals if Elected
1. Be the voice of students in the College of Humanities, Arts, and Sciences
2. Increase student involvement, particularly freshman, in NISG.
3. Increase lobbying efforts to governmental officials.

Alicia Jessip
Classification: Sophomore
Major: Spanish & Communication/Electronic Media
Other Involvement: NISG Director of Diversity, Student Admissions Ambassadors, Alpha Delta Pi, Dance Marathon Committee, UNI Proud, Black Student Union, Hispanic Latino Student Union

3 Goals if Elected
1. Increased student involvement, particularly for underclassman
2. Increased representation for diverse student groups and organization, including actual discussion on how to make UNI a more inclusive place
3. Be an available representative for the College of Humanities, Arts, and Sciences

Connor Ave
Classification: Sophomore
Major: All Science Teaching
Other Involvement: Sigma Phi Epsilon, UNI Debate Team, and UNI Tae Kwon-Do club

3 Goals if Elected
1. Increase the sense of community at UNI. This includes changing the DOR’s (horrible, in this bloggers opinion) posting policy to help organization events (such as CAB) flourish.
2. Get students actively involved in the decision making at this university
3. Make sure all student organizations are treated, and funded, fairly

Jordan Leckband
Classification: Senior
Major: Music Education: Choral/General
Other Involvement: Vice President of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, American Choral Directors Association, Iowa Bandmasters Associations, UNI Men’s Glee Club, UNI Concert Chorale, and UNI Pep Band

3 Goals if Elected
1. Making funding easier for student organizations
2. Advocate for student performances -- not only sports, but visual art exhibits, theater productions, and music performances.
3. Give CHAS a more community feel with common goals, so it's more than just 14 different departments with 70 different majors

Stacey Lynne Howes
Classification: Sophomore
Major: Biology
Other involvement: Lawther Senate, Ultimate Frisbee Club, TOMS, Tri-Beta, and Undergraduate Research

3 Goals if Elected
1. Provide students with more ways to get involved on campus and in their major.
2. Increasing communication between constituents and their senators
3. Make the funding process simpler and more available for the student body to understand.

Website Analysis: Trevor and Beth

This is the third in a series of three posts analyzing campaign websites. 

Address: www.trevorandbeth.com

Trevor and Beth have a website with a design that is refreshing and different than what is generally seen. Rather than having a solid background with a photo on a banner or in a post, the background is a photo of the candidates with solid islands of information over top.  Their website is hosted by GoDaddy and created using GoDaddy's built-in website creator, WebSite Tonight. 

The color scheme of the website is the classic purple and yellow as seen on many campaign websites of the present and past. I would be all in favor of them channeling their panther pride, but the pair uses blues and aquas for all of the rest of their campaign material (posters, t-shirts, buttons, etc.). The difference in color schemes makes the branding feel slightly disjointed.

One big and necessary change Trevor and Beth's webmaster made after the initial launch was the elimination of Flash-based content. Prior to the update it was not possible to link to specific pages on the website, and visitors were unable to scroll on pages when viewing the site on a mobile device.  Now visitors can directly link to the separate pages of the website and the scrolling issue is no longer a problem.

What They're Doing Well
  • Videos - This is the only one of the three presidential tickets that has decided to use video as a means to reach out to students. Not only have Trevor and Beth developed a YouTube channel (that unfortunately isn't branded), but they have a page on their site dedicated to the videos they post on the channel. They have been consistently putting out videos, and even uploaded a response to a student's video. One of the things they would like to do while in office is post a weekly NISG video blog, and this is a great start to that. It shows they are serious about that particular plank.
  • Voting Information - While it isn't much, Trevor and Beth are the only candidates to have the voting dates and a link to MyUNIverse on their website. It's one of the first things visitors see when they visit the campaign site, so it serves as a great reminder for people to vote.
What They Could Do Better
  • Color Scheme/Branding - As I mentioned above, it would be nice to see a consistent color scheme across all of their campaign materials. It would also be nice to see a consistent typeface across the board. To my knowledge, there has not been a ticket in at least the past five years that hasn't used at least purple or gold/yellow in their color scheme. This ticket should take advantage of the unique and memorable color scheme that is different than what students are accustomed to seeing.
  • Social Media - At first glance, the three icons on each page of the Trevor and Beth website look like links to their Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace(?!). However, they are just links to share the page on those social media sites. Upon examining their site, I found links to their Twitter and Facebook at the bottom of their platform, which isn't a very visible location. There is also a new addition of their Twitter feed on the Campaign Videos page. I would suggest changing the location of the feed to somewhere more visible because a visitor won't see the feed unless they scroll down the page. Adding links to these social media outlets on the home page as well as the contact page would be a small, but helpful improvement.
  • Platform - A small usability improvement for site viewers would be to move the link to download the platform from the bottom of the platform page to the top. There is also a lot of unnecessary paragraph spaces between each of the platform planks. By removing the excess space the readability of the page would be improved.

Overall Thoughts
Trevor and Beth have a couple of unique aspects on their site that set it apart from the others.  My favorite thing is that they are actively using video as a medium.  If they add and change the location of some links, they'll have a great site.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Debate Highlights

Well, the debate between the presidential tickets is over, and the biggest surprise of the night was that the ground was covered in snow when I left the Union. While all of the candidates carried themselves well, they mostly stuck to information from their platforms when answering questions. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing, since their platforms encompass what they plan to do and hope to achieve during their time in office. But since they didn’t stray too far from this information throughout the night, I felt that the debate lacked any flair that made candidates stick out. No one ticket really separated itself from the others in a major way or came across as the clear “winner” of tonight’s debate. This may be due to the format of the debate itself. It was more a moderated forum than an actual debate. Because of this, none of the tickets got the opportunity to directly demonstrate how they differentiate themselves from the other tickets. 

One thing that this debate did allow the candidates to show us was how comfortable they are speaking in front of groups. The president and vice president serve as the face and voice of the student body. To successfully accomplish this objective, public speaking skills are absolutely critical. While none of the candidates had poor public speaking skills, I really feel that Kyle established himself as the best speaker in the group. This is likely due to his experience as president of Student Admissions Ambassadors. While Kyle seemed natural up on the stage, Brendan seemed less engaged during the debate, and Kyle would often step in to elaborate on Brendan’s comments. Jordan and KaLeigh both seemed very comfortable speaking in front of a large group as well. Trevor and Beth impressed me by being the only candidates to stand up while speaking. This gave them a bit of an edge that seemed to keep the audience’s attention on them. Trevor did not have any problems speaking, but he seemed to take a back seat multiple times during the debate and let his sister do the majority of the talking. 

The opening remarks section of the debate seemed slightly awkward, as none of the candidates spoke on their platforms or what they hope to accomplish in office. They merely told us a little about who they are and what they were involved with on campus. The real opening comments came in response to the first question asked by the moderators. The question was “What are three things you think should be available to every student at UNI, and how will you make sure students have access to it?” This gave us a chance to hear from the candidates what they found important and what they would do for the student body if elected, although the answers all seemed very vague and similar to the other tickets answers. A question from current Student Body President Spencer Walrath about how candidates planned to work with senate allowed Jordan and KaLeigh to stick out by showing their familiarity with senate operations. This is also where Kyle first mentioned collaboration through communication, which became a common saying from him for the rest of the debate. As the debate moved into questions from the audience, there were very few questions that provided us with opportunity for the candidates to speak on anything new. Most of their responses came straight from information in their platforms.

The closing comments section of the debate was a very important portion of the debate because it let the candidates leave us with something to remember them by. Kyle did a great job of hitting on the points he made about the three things that he felt students should have access to. This allowed him to establish a theme for his ticket and let us know what he hopes to do for the student body. It was also good to hear him say they even though he and Brendan are both athletes, they are students first. This helped to alleviate some of the worries that have been expressed about their time constraints from participating in track. Jordan made some good comments about what he would do for the student body, and KaLeigh did a great job of closing their thoughts by bringing up the feasibility and realism of their platform. She also encouraged everyone to be as informed as possible before voting. 

While tonight’s debate did not have a clear winner, it allowed us to become more familiar with the candidates and their platforms. It was really nice to have all three tickets in the same place at the same time. For more detailed information on tonight’s debate check out Chris Miller's live blogging of the debate. I encourage everyone to learn as much as possible about the candidates and their platforms and keep checking in with us for campaign coverage.

Live Blogging the Debate

Jeff Harms, Joel Anderson, & The Panther Pundit are sitting next to me contributing their thoughts all night. 


7:02pm : Everyone is here. Everyone is excited. Trevor was just caught singing Billy Joel. Although, it's not as good as KaLeigh's rendition of "Build Me up Buttercup".

Joel's comments on Jordan's outfit, "If you took a picture of him and made it black and white he would look like an 1890s Iron Tycoon. He has the pocket watch and everything! I just imagined a political cartoonist turning him into a giant bag of money! It's a good look on him"

7:07pm: John Anderson begins with the format of the debate. First it will begin with opening statements, then moderator questions, then questions form the audience, then closing statements.

7:08pm: All the candidates open up with their credentials.

The Election Commissioner points out that, "It's strange that they aren't talking about their platforms. Just their credentials."

7:12pm 


What are three things that you think should be available to every student at UNI? How you will assure that students have access to it?


Trevor/ Beth:
1. A great education.
2. Access to Student Leaders.
3. A great experience at UNI.

Jordan/KaLeigh:
1. Students know what resources are available for them.
2. Increase NISG awareness.
3. Create a community for students.

Kyle/Brendan:
1. Quality Education
2. Access to Resources
3. Enjoyable Experience.

A lot of these answers are the same. The candidates don't seem to separate themselves from each other yet. Jeff points out that Brendan was the only candidate not to speak on that question.

What are your stances on the changes that President Allen announced may be made in the coming years?

Jordan/KaLeigh:
Cuts are necessary. Most important to UNI is academics. Not sure what we can directly do to influence the cuts.

Kyle/Brendan:
Budget cuts suck. We'll have to measure our resources and try to fit them into our three objectives from above. We want to be the voice of the students.

Trevor/Beth:
We want to fight for students, especially in academics. We would fight for all the other programs too, but recognize that athletics CAN be cut.

They all seem to put academics first. But disagree on the point of athletics.
       
Who have you met in the University administration about your platform?


Kyle/Brendan:
We meet with students first. Joel says, "sounds like a very Cezar-Lobdell response".

Trevor/Beth:
We have put the most thought into this. We have the most concise and realistic platform.

Jordan/KaLeigh:
We spoke with the people involved with Veteran affairs, Disability students, and the director of dining.

None of the candidates seemed to drop many names with people they worked with.

From Spencer Walrath- How will candidates work with Senate?


Trevor/Beth:
Communication. Communication. Communication. Communication.
Also add humor to instense situations. Perhaps like this video?

http://newsfeed.time.com/2012/02/15/is-this-the-funniest-youtube-video-ever/

Jordan/KaLeigh:
Senate is their own voice. We want to collaborate to accomplish the same goals.

Kyle/Brendan:
We have the same goal as the Senate. We want to communicate with them and create a professional and personal relationships with them.

I think that Kyle and KaLeigh are huge winners in that one. They seemed to be speaking to the students, not just the moderators.

How do the tickets plan on lobbying more effectively and keep tuition down?


Jordan/KaLeigh:
The reason the Iowa Legislature doesn't care about us is because we don't vote in the elections. We want to increase the voters. We want to have freshman register to vote at orientation. (Joel points out that this is the only fresh idea that we've heard on lobbying).

Kyle/Brendan:
We want students to write letters, visit the capital, and voice their opinions to the government. We need students to vote if we are going to be properly representatives.

Trevor/Beth (I just realized that they are the only candidates that are still standing when they speak)
We want to hire the best Director of Governmental Relations possible, so that they can do the best job in the Capital.

What do you think about Greek  Life on campus?


Kyle/Brendan:
We can't make our Greek Life comparable to ISU and UI. But we're UNI, we're unique and we have a unique Greek life.
"Greek are small but mighty"-Kyle Burns
We want to collaborate more with NISG and Greeks on campus.

Trevor/Beth:
Greek like is.. Great!
We should always encourage student organizations to grow and be awesome.

Jordan/KaLeigh:
We have Greeks included on our platform. We don't like that they are separated from the campus. We want to work with IFC and Panhel to pick our Greek cabinet positions on campus.

Now we are taking questions from the audience


7:54pm "How will you spend the rest of your campaign funds"- Laura Castro

Kyle/Brendan- We funded this all ourselves. But any extra will be donated.
Trevor/Beth- We are donating all extra shirts to kids in Nicaragua.
Jordan/KaLeigh- If we win, we are going to use it to pay for travel to Des Moines. If we lose, we'll donate our money

7:56pm "I spoke with the Veterans Affairs student organization and they said that there is no communication between NISG and the Organization. How will you change this?"

Jordan/KaLeigh: We will use the lower cabinet to do that and pass bills like I sponsored last week with Jared Parker. Which pledged to dedicate more resources to Veterans.

7:58pm "What are you tangibly going to do to help diversity on campus?"

Trevor/Beth: We will create a diversity student advisory board.

8:00pm "What haven't Trevor and Beth filled the open Campbell Hall seat in NISG Senate"

Trevor/Beth: Trevor is busy with other things and wants to put his full effort in it. Beth is secretary of Campbell Hall Senate.

8:04pm "What are your thoughts on a LGBTQ center on campus?"

Jordan/KaLeigh: Awesome. Letsdoit.

Kyle/Brednan: We are going to meet with the LGBTQ students first (which is happening week) before we come up with solutions. We need to know the problems first.

Trevor/Beth:  LGBTQ are students too. So they will get the same treatment.

8:17pm "Sometimes it's difficult to hang posters in the DOR because of their policies"- KaLeigh
No kidding. The DOR posting policy is impossible. Joel says, "It's killing student organizations like CAB and Panther Productions". I agree. DOR, if you're listening. Help students out.

8:18pm On how the debate is going so far, Jeff says, "So far the (audience) questions are things that could have been answered by reading through the platforms. The candidates are really going much further past their platforms in this debate. I don't see a common theme from any of the tickets"

8:20pm Throughout this entire debate, Trevor and Beth have been the only candidates to stand up while speaking. This gave them a huge advantage. It drew my eyes to them throughout and forced me to watch them while they spoke.

8:22pm Closing statements are going to begin

Kyle/Brendan
Thanks for coming out to this. We really appreciate it. We firmly stand for the three things at the beginning.
1. Quality Education
2. Access to Resources
3. Enjoyable Time at UNI
We are students first, not athletes. We put our academics first and will continue to do that if we win.

Trevor/Beth
We like all the other tickets, it's been fun. We thank everyone. We want to lead this campus.

Jordan/KaLeigh
Thanks to everyone (including me!). KaLeigh thinks that they have the best platform and wants everyone to get informed before they vote.

Live Streaming and Live Blogging the Debate!!

The debate is about to start!

You can watch it live here:
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/nisgmoderator

If you can't watch it, stay tuned to the blog. I'll be live blogging it!

Bancroft-Smithe responds to Miller on CBA supplemental tuition

The following is a letter from presidential candidate Jordan Bancroft-Smithe in response to Chris Miller's earlier post about CBA supplemental tuition.
Last week, Chris Miller posted on this blog about our platform plank relating to differential tuition rates for the College of Business Administration. I would like to note some changes we will be making to our plank in response to Chris’ post. The main thing we needed to change is the tone of the plank. It comes across as if we are attacking the CBA and their policy of differential tuition. Specifically speaking, I am referring to the word “audit.” To audit somebody, or to be audited, has negative connotations, and because of this I understand Chris’ reaction. We are not saying that the CBA is doing a poor job of providing for its students, but rather that there are students that are not seeing or noticing these promised services. The point of this would be, as Chris put it himself talking about one of our other planks, “showing students what is going on without them having to take the proactive approach of searching for it.” We would be taking that proactive approach and get that information for the students.

Secondly, in our plank we ask the question, “What is our* extra $1,500 going towards?” I feel like there are several questions inherent within that question. By not mentioning these questions, I added to the confusion and the feeling that the plank was attacking the CBA’s differential tuition policy. I apologize for not making these questions explicit, and they will be included into our platform. We are not just asking, “What is our extra $1,500 going towards?” We are also asking, “How well is that extra $1,500 being spent? Are class sizes going down? Are new hires being used to replace the loss of adjuncts? Are new courses being added?” This is something that is important for the students to know and we believe that it should remain on our platform. It has been three years since this policy of differential tuition was put in place and we think that students, especially those who were here before the implementation of differential tuition, should be able to see what the CBA has been able to do with the supplemental money. 
Now to address some of the things that Chris said that I feel are inaccurate or beside the point. The first being that he called us out on calling it differential tuition when, as it clearly states in the link he provided that it is called “supplemental tuition.” You may have noticed that I am still referring to is as differential tuition and this is because “differential tuition” and “supplemental tuition” are one in the same. Iowa State calls the similar program in their College of Business and College of Engineering “Differential Tuition.” And if you go to their engineering program’s site it clearly states that “Differential tuition, sometimes referred to as supplemental tuition or a tuition surcharge…” in the beginning of the second paragraph. “Supplemental Tuition” is the name that UNI and the CBA gave to a differential tuition policy.

The second issue I have is with what he said about refilling positions. Currently, as is stated in UNI’s master agreement article five: section five, UNI holds a policy of attrition. As it was explained to me, when a faculty member leaves, their position is not refilled. Instead the position is removed, it is taken into review, and then the administration decides whether or not to reinstate that position. This can lead to the perception of positions not being refilled because this process can take time, or this could also mean that the positions are being eliminated. Either way, having a report that is accessible to the students showing that these positions are being kept, filled, and are making classes smaller would be most beneficial. I can’t see why Dean Farzad Moussavi would be opposed to this. If we find that this information is already available, then we should work with Dean Moussavi and the CBA to get this information to the students. 
Finally, I want to address the percentage quotes that he provides from the CBA website. While those numbers are nice, they don’t tell the whole story. Chris has told me that the information I would be looking for, which is a complete breakdown of where the supplemental dollars are going, is available and Dean Moussavi has already provided it to the CBA Presidents Council. The problem with this then becomes that the information on those reports wasn’t readily available to the students who are not a part of that council. Part of what we want to do is to gather all of this information into a single, easy to read report that will be available to the students of the CBA.

To conclude, I would like to commend Chris and the other writers of the blog. This shows that the blog is doing its job by making sure that the candidates stay both honest and realistic in this race. It’s great that there are people out there double checking our facts and it proves that the blog is a necessary component of this process.

*”Our” is referring to the students in the CBA

Vote for Colombo?

Last week, the Election Commission received a very peculiar petition for a name to appear on this year's ballot for NISG.

Meet Colombo. For those of you who don't recognize this face, Colombo is the African Grey Parrot in the UNI Botanical Center. Colombo's hobbies include perching on the above branch, climbing around her cage, and even doing a spot on impression of the preserves manager, Billie Hammer. This year, Colombo received 56 signatures in her quest to represent the College of Humanities, Arts, and Sciences in NISG Senate. This isn't the frist animal to try doing the improbable, though. In the 80s, "Ally the Alligator" almost won many elections.

This afternoon, I met Colombo's director of Public Relations, Eric Moellers, to discuss Colombo's political aspirations. I met Eric in the Green House, which was a new experience for me. The Green House is located right next to Wright Hall, and I must say, it is an amazing place. As a student, I knew that my tuition and fees funded the Green House but I never had taken the time to visit. Not only did I regret my decision to never make a visit, I plan on stopping by whenever I can in the future. The Green House has multiple environments that host almost every plant imaginable. Bananas, cacti, and bamboo are just some of the unique plants that I saw today.

I also got the chance to interview Colombo. Although she was disappointed to not make the ballot, as she didn't meet the GPA requirement, she assured me that her write-in cannidacy is in full swing. Planks are on her platform included permanently bringing the New York Times to campus, increasing awareness for the Green House, and lowering tuition.

With 8 people on the ballot for 5 seats, Colombo is going to have a tough time winning the election. However, if any bird is going to have her day, it's going to be Colombo. I hope that all of you take the chance to visit Colombo, and the Green House. The people there are fantastic and they would love to give you a tour. After all, it's funded through YOUR tuition dollars. It is open 8-4 from Monday-Friday. All you need to do is walk in and ask for a tour.

Stay tuned to the Blog tonight for coverage of the Debate, too!!

Debate tonight!

The three presidential tickets will be debating tonight at 7 p.m. in the Maucker Union Coffeehouse. Come and listen as candidates discuss their platforms and answer questions from me and co-moderator Michael Lunn. There will be time for questions from the audience, so come prepared with questions.

Commissioner names senate candidates

Thirty minutes ago, Election Commissioner Jill Hohnecker released the names of the presidential and senatorial candidates who will appear on the ballot at the end of the month. All three known presidential tickets got the 150 signatures necessary to get on the ballot, and there will be contested elections for a total of eight seats -- three for the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences and five for the College of Humanities, Arts, and Sciences. While it's unsurprising to see uncontested elections in the Graduate College, the College of Education (which is traditionally underrepresented, though failing to get a single name on the ballot is a surprise), and the Undecided/General Studies seats, I find it surprising to see only two names for the College of Business Administration, especially considering the absence of the current CBA senator, Evan Cruise. I also find it interesting that only six of the 18 senatorial candidates currently serve on senate, meaning that we could see a large turnover in next year's senate.

Here's the list of candidates who will be on the ballot:

President and Vice President
Jordan Bancroft-Smithe and KaLeigh White
Trevor Monnier and Beth Monnier
Kyle Burns and Brendan Thompson

College of Social and Behavioral Sciences (3 seats)
Andrew Miller
David Pope
Devin Davis
Eric Boisen
Jared Parker
Margaret Nervig

College of Humanities, Arts, and Sciences (5 seats)
Jordan Wilmes
Blake Findley
Stacy Lynne Howes
Tucker Olson
Christina Johnson
Alicia Jessip
Connor Hudson Ave
Jordan Leckband

Graduate College (3 seats)
Vincent Chukwuemeka
Chase Felchle

College of Business Administration (3 seats)
Tyler Moran
Thomas Madsen

College of Education (3 seats)
(open)

Undecided/General Studies/Other (2 seats)
(open)

Sunday, February 19, 2012

The Athlete Vote

In an earlier post Chris commented on how engaged the students living in Campbell Hall are on campus and how vital their votes have been in previous NISG elections. This year, however, it seems that there is the potential for a new voting bloc to move in and influence the results of the presidential election: student athletes. Both Kyle and Brendan are members of UNI’s Track and Field team. Obviously, the connection will help them gain votes from members of their own organization, but several other athletic teams have been showing support for this ticket as well. With approximately 400 student athletes on campus, this group could really help Kyle and Brendan gain an advantage on election day.

There seems to be a stereotype that the UNI student athletes differ from the average student in regards to their voting habits in NISG elections. People seem to think that athletes are less likely to vote than other students on campus. The student athletes are actually more like the average student in respect to voting than you would expect. The number of students who vote in NISG elections has actually been fairly low as a percentage of the student body. Last year there was a total 2176 votes for presidential candidates. This means that less than 20% of the student body voted. Around 300 of these votes came from Campbell Hall alone, which makes them a force to be reckoned with if their level of participation continues. However, if the athletes come out in full force, they could easily match the expected number of Campbell Hall voters and become the new “kingmakers” on campus. It will be interesting to see the role that the student athletes play in this year’s election and what kind of impact they will have on future NISG elections.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Facebook and Elections

While number of Facebook friends and likes of candidate pages does not necessarily translate to votes, these numbers can be a good check to see a candidate's popularity and viability: Facebook outreach seems to have been a prominent factor in recent elections. Having a large number of Facebook friends is important because it increases a candidate’s ability to reach out to the student body. Candidates will typically invite all of their friends to their pages, which gives them the ability to promote themselves in a way that requires minimal effort. Also, the more friends candidates have, the more people see their status updates. This leads to more comments and likes, which show up on even more people’s news feeds. Facebook, in this way, is an easy method of campaigning to a large number of people. It gives candidates the name recognition and support they need to get votes. Since Facebook has become mainstream, the ticket with the most people in their Facebook group has won every contested election. This makes having a good Facebook page with a lot of likes absolutely vital to the candidates.

These numbers are important in the presidential election, but they are probably even more crucial in elections for senate. While the presidential candidates undertake extensive campaigning efforts to spread their names and platforms, a Facebook page is typically the only form of campaigning done by many senate candidates. They do not get their name spread across campus the same way the presidential candidates do, so the support of their friends can be the difference between winning and losing. Senators typically win their elections with around 200 votes. The highest number of votes any senate candidate had last year was 374. A large number of these votes may have come from people who were only reached by the candidates through Facebook. 

So where are the presidential candidates at compared to when formal campaigning started? Here is a breakdown:

Trevor Monnier
Current friends: 1383
Friends at beginning: 891

Beth Monnier
Current friends: 496
Friends at beginning: 470

Students for Trevor and Beth: 89 Likes

Jordan Bancroft-Smithe
Current friends: 434
Friends at beginning: 392

KaLeigh White
Current friends: 346
Friends at beginning: 294

Jordan and KaLeigh for UNI Students: 151 Likes

Kyle Burns
Current friends: 829
Friends at beginning: 785

Brendan Thompson
Current friends: 727
Friends at beginning: 697

Students for Kyle & Brendan: 227 Likes

Based on page likes, it looks like Kyle and Brendan are the current front runners. I am actually surprised by the friend counts, though; most of the candidates have only had modest increases in friend totals. Trevor, however, has experienced an explosion in friends over the last week, increasing his total by an astonishing 492. This has been the typical trend in previous years, and I was expecting most of the candidates to have large increases in number of friends. Campaigning is still far from over, though, and I expect the number of likes and friends will continue increasing as the process goes on.

Friday, February 17, 2012

The Student Services Fee

As I mentioned last night, the president’s most important role is to speak on behalf of UNI students to the Board of Regents and Iowa General Assembly. On campus, the most important role is to chair the Student Services Fee Committee. The Student Services Fee Committee is the committee that makes recommendations to President Allen for the allocations of the $213 student services fee (SSF) that every student pays in addition to tuition. This is the money that funds Homecoming, CAB, Athletics, the GBPAC, the Northern Iowan, NISG, and much more. Without the SSF, students would be required to pay for athletic event tickets and CAB events, would never have the opportunity to use NISG funds to bring speakers in, and Homecoming events would be nonexistent. Needless to say, the SSF is vitally important, and every student attending the university has benefited from what it funds at one time or another.

The SSF committee is chaired by the student body president. The rest of the committee is made up of five faculty members, three NISG at-large appointees, and the chair of NISG's Organization and Finance Committee. Together, they review applications for each line item of the SSF and make recommendations to President Allen. As chair of the committee, the student body president’s role is absolutely vital. Former Student Body President Joel Anderson used his position to rework the entire application process. In the coming weeks we’ll be finding out what President Walrath does with the committee, too.

Currently, the SSF Committee is sitting on hundreds of thousands of dollars of unspent money. It’s an issue that needs to be addressed in the coming months, and which possibly will be dealt with by one of our three candidates for president. Students, your vote in the upcoming election should be influenced by who you trust the most to make the SSF reach the most students as possible.

Some key questions to ask candidates about this include:

  • What are you going to recommend for the excess contingency fund dilemma?
  • When Athletics asks for more money, are you going to approve it? If you do approve it, what will you recommend to fund less of?
  • What will you do to protect funding for things like The Northern Iowan?
  • Taking a stance in a room where all of the “adults/faculty” disagree with you is really tough. How will you handle it?

Even if you already know who you’re voting for, send an email/facebook message to all the candidates with these questions. Press them for answers. On campus, this is the most important thing that the student body president does. Make sure you know what your candidate is willing to do/say to best represent the student body.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Website Analysis: Kyle and Brendan

This is the second in a series of three posts analyzing campaign websites. 

Address:  www.kyle-brendan.com

Kyle and Brendan have a very neat, yet fun layout for their campaign website. They are using Google Blogger as a host, which gives them a lot of freedom when it comes to layout. Blogger also makes it incredibly easy to update posts. They tie their brand into their website by displaying one of their posters as the first thing visitors see when they come to the site. While I would like to see the same typeface used in the header across the website, it is possible that Blogger doesn't allow for images or typeface embedding within the header.

With only five straightforward tabs in the left sidebar, Kyle and Brendan's site is easy to navigate. What confuses me, however, are the links across the top in the gold bar that allow visitors to change the layout. It may come with the pre-made Blogger layout they chose. Unfortunately, I find it distracting.

Because the website is hosted on Blogger, I am curious to see if the team decides to use their site as a platform to blog. As I mentioned in my last post, blog posts are a great way to keep students up-to-date and informed about a campaign.

Another advantage of using Blogger is the built-in mobile site. This website displays wonderfully on my Android device, as well as the iPhone. Because of the dynamic content, however, the site is unable to load on the iPad. The mobile site is viewable on the iPad, but it is rather clunky and unattractive.

Much like the other campaign teams, Kyle and Brendan have been quick and eager to make changes to their website. When it went live it had the Media page as its homepage. Having Contact Us being the first thing visitors see is a vast improvement. By having the contact page as the home page, visitors are immediately encouraged to connect with them on Facebook and Twitter, or possibly even send the candidates an email.

What They're Doing Well
  • Simplicity - Kyle and Brendan are doing a great job of saying a lot by having a minimalistic construction for their website. The white and gray backgrounds are crisp and professional, and the purple and gold header adds a touch of panther pride without being overbearing. The navigation sidebar is attractive and easy to use. I would, however, prefer to see the Platform link higher than the Media link. The platform is more important, so treat it as such.
  • Engagement Functions - By using Blogger there are a lot of beneficial buttons on Kyle and Brendan's site. With a simple click a viewer can share a page on Google+, Twitter, or Facebook. There is also a button in the upper right for viewers to subscribe to the site's RSS feed, in addition to a search box. These two functions will be particularly helpful if this team decides to use their website as a blog. If the site stays static for the rest of the campaign, it is kind of pointless to have them as features at all. As I mentioned in my previous review, commenting is also enabled on Kyle and Brendan's site. Site comments are a quick and easy way for site viewers to be engaged with the content.

What They Could Do Better
  • Posters - Much like Jordan and KaLeigh, Kyle and Brendan have availability issues with their posters. The duo has three posters available on their Facebook page, but they're not available as full resolution downloads. It would be great to see these posters available on their website for supporters to download and print. I wouldn't suggest adding them to the Media page because they have so many photos (almost too many). The way their site stands right now, they only have five tabs in their sidebar.  Adding a sixth one for Downloadables or Support our Team wouldn't create any extra clutter. In addition, it would also be great to have Facebook profile pictures and cover photos. (Kyle and Brendan both have their campaign cover photo on their personal Facebooks, but it isn't available to download anywhere else. They should spread it; the cover photo is great campaign space.)
  • Platform - Having a downloadable PDF as an option on the Platform page is suggested so visitors can simply download the platform, read it as it was intentionally formatted, and possibly print it. Adding a download link at the top of the Platform page would be a small but helpful improvement

Overall Thoughts
Kyle and Brendan present their campaign in a neatly and to-the-point way with their website. They have been making layout and platform updates whenever they deem necessary, which is great. By adding some more media like posters and blog posts, they could make their site even better.

More Cuts Coming

As many of you are aware, today President Allen sent out an email describing the impending loses of funding at UNI. More information can be found here: http://wcfcourier.com/news/local/uni-president-cuts-could-be-coming-for-academics-athletics-and/article_986f279a-58f0-11e1-baab-0019bb2963f4.html

It’s a good reminder of just how easily funds can get pulled and budgets get slashed. Make sure to email your candidates for their opinion on the issue. What are they going to do to during their term to help mitigate these cuts? How will they approach the Board of Regents and Iowa General Assembly? Remember, the student body president speaks to both of these groups. I think whichever candidate can establish themself as the most qualified to do this will end up winning. Make sure to find out how your candidate will handle these situations before you make your vote.

Jordan and KaLeigh on CBA Supplemental Tuition

This afternoon, Jordan and KaLeigh updated their platform to include a topic that hasn't been addressed on any of the other platforms: College of Business Administration supplemental tuition. For those of you unaware, students admitted to the CBA are required to pay supplemental tuition, which amounts to roughly $1500 extra every year. Jordan and KaLeigh's platform explain their stance:


Several students have asked about our position on differential tuition rates in the College of Business Administration (CBA). CBA students pay roughly $1,500 more a year in tuition than the average student pays. The reason provided for this is that the students are receiving one of the best educations in the nation with highly qualified faculty. Unfortunately, in the three years since the implementation of differential tuition rates, the CBA students have not been seeing the returns for their money. As faculty leave the university or retire, their positions are not being filled again. This brings up the question, “What is our extra $1500 going towards?” We feel that the students in the CBA would like to see an audit of their college showing them exactly where their tuition money is going. We would work with the CBA to explore this option and others in order to assure business students see the benefit of their additional investment. 

Being the former CBA Senator for two years and a member of the CBA President's Council (which is made up of all of the president's of CBA student organizations), this topic is near and dear to my heart. I'm not sure who Jordan and KaLeigh were talking to, but the CBA has always been very open with what supplemental tuition covers. A quick google search lead me here:


The bottom of that page clearly shows what the money is being spent on. 
-55% for new faculty lines
-30% for professional skills initiative
-15% for financial aid for business students

This was developed years ago by a the CBA President's Council. Supplemental tuition has led to numerous new faculty hires, smaller classes, the Professional Readiness Program (PRP), and more scholarship money. To say that faculty are retiring without being rehired is crazy. Especially considering the CBA made multiple new hires this year that would not have been possible without supplemental tuition. Personally, I am forever grateful for this program, as it has funded the very scholarship that brought me to this campus. 

I'm not sure where Jordan and KaLeigh are getting their information, but it's not coming from the CBA. This is clear from the fact that they are calling it "differential" tuition. It's actually called supplemental tuition. I hope that they take the time to find out the real information and update their platform accordingly.