Emma Kallaway will be the next ASUO president after beating rival Michelle Haley by more than 600 votes in the ASUO general election last week. Results were posted Friday evening after a one-day delay.
Kallaway’s victory was occasioned by wins for her supporters on the Students First and True Blue slates in 13 of the 14 other races that went to the general election. Haley’s Oregon Action Team slate, whose candidates finished first in all but one of the races they contested in the primary election, gained only three positions Friday.
Voting in the election ended Thursday at 5 p.m., but the ASUO Elections Board held up release of the results to determine whether it could allow students in the American English Institute to vote. After meetings with University administrators Friday morning, however, the elections board decided against pursuing the issue and posted the results in the ASUO office window that afternoon.
“The elections turned into a circus,” Students First Campaign Manager Andrew Crampton said, “but the process is not a circus.” Crampton said the role of the elections board will have to be reexamined next year.
Other elections board rulings stirred controversy during the election. The board ordered Haley and her running mate Ted
Sebastian stricken from the ballot after finding evidence it received supported allegations of bribery. The ASUO Constitution Court reversed the decision, finding the evidence insufficient to prove the charges.
Oregon Action Team campaign manager Marcus Krieg said the board’s decisions were responsible in part for the slate’s performance.
“What’s unfortunate is I think our candidates ran a real honest and good campaign,” Krieg said. “It’s real tough because I think the ASUO will miss the Oregon Action Team this year.”
Krieg also mentioned “bad press” and the manner in which Kallaway and her running mate Getachew Kassa administered their campaign. He cited their decision to ally with slates whose presidential candidates lost in the primaries as evidence that their claims to independence were false. “They’ve run a really shitty, really petty campaign,” he said.
Kallaway disagreed.
“The campaigns bring out frustration in anyone,” she said, referring to Krieg’s comment. “When you have this much energy bottled into three weeks, it can bring out the worst in anybody.”
Kallaway said she owes her victory to the competence and independence of her supporters.
Haley did not return phone calls Friday night or Sunday. “I think people are still in shock,” she said. Haley e-mailed a statement to the Emerald thanking her supporters, but made no mention of her opponents.
Kallaway said she received congratulatory phone calls on Friday from Sen. Demic Tipitino, who ran on the Oregon Action Team slate, and ASUO President Sam Dotters-Katz.
“I have a great deal of respect for President-elect Emma Kallaway and I’m confident she will far surpass the measure which will be given to my legacy,” Dotters-Katz said.
Kallaway received 2,031 votes in the general election, more than double the number she got during the primary. Haley’s total of 1,368 only bettered her support in the primaries by 30 votes. The number of votes in the general election totaled 3,399, down from 4,108 in the primary, or a drop from 20 to 18 percent voter turnout.
Kallaway and Haley ran against three other candidates in the primary: True Blue’s Nick Schultz, Students First’s Carina Miller and independent candidate Ryan McCarrel.
Next Year’s Senate
– | ? Seat 1: Jessica Jones, Students First ? Seat 2: Nick Schultz, True Blue (elected on Rock the Yellow) ? Seat 3: Lyzi Diamond, Students First ? Seat 4: Paige Libadisos, True Blue ? Seat 5: OPEN (currently occupied by Kallaway) ? Seat 6: Tyler Griffin, Students First ? Seat 7: Alex McCafferty, Oregon Action Team 2009 (elected on Oregon Action Team 2008) ? Seat 8: Benjamin Dodds, Students First ? Seat 9: Demic Tipitino, Oregon Action Team 2009 ? Seat 10: Jeremy Blanchard, True Blue ? Seat 11: Max Barkley, Students First ? Seat 12: Nick Gower, Students First (elected on Rock the Yellow) ? Seat 13: Ryan Lassi, Oregon Action Team 2009 ? Seat 14: Lidiana Soto, True Blue (elected on Rock the Yellow) ? Seat 15: Kristine Jensen, Students First ? Seat 16: Zachary Stark-MacMillan, True Blue ? Seat 17: Christina Ergas, True Blue ? Seat 18: Sandy Weintraub, independent ? Seat 19: Lindsay Reichardt, Oregon Action Team 2009 ? Seat 20: Amanda Hilts, independent ? Students First: 7 ? True Blue: 6 ? Oregon Action Team 2009: 4 ? Independent: 2 ? Open seats: one |
After the election, in which Haley finished first and Kallaway second, both opposing slates and
McCarrel endorsed Kallaway, issuing fliers and messages reading “Vote All Three.”
In total, 11 Students First candidates won positions in the general election, along with five from True Blue. The only general election candidate from the coalition who did not win a race was incumbent Sen. Deborah Bloom, who lost by only six votes. Crampton said the slate’s success was a reflection of its values of integrating diverse perspectives.
Kallaway said she will look Monday to begin a smooth transition of power from Dotters-Katz, which will include assembling an executive staff. She said she hopes Oregon Action Team members will seek jobs on it.
“I really hope that anyone who didn’t succeed the way they want to will continue to be involved in the ASUO,” Kallaway said.
Krieg said he is skeptical that there will be a place for his candidates under Kallaway. “Every time they look at us, they’ll know that they won a really underhanded campaign,” he said.
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