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Broad student apathy was a direct result of a lack of such commercially
capable candidates. No one candidate
suggested that the Guild buy a bar in town (why not Yoko’s?) and generate
revenue from that. Nobody suggested turning the Penglais Union into a daytime Starbucks
serving a noisy ‘group study’ area in order to restore the library to silent
working only and generate revenues for the Union. Not one put forward a plan to
recover the Hugh Owen for the studious and generate much needed revenue for the
Union for all of our benefit. Not one manifesto
suggested any real understanding of financial management or presented any
economic model at all for that matter. None pointed out that only after
generating real revenue could the Guild offer, and deliver any real change or
improvements for and on behalf of students. After studying all of the election
manifestos (yawn), it’s obvious that none of the candidates had either the
vision to imagine or the experience to implement real changes on such a vast
but necessary scale.
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This piece was originally written for the Aber Courier for
last week’s Election Special. However,
the Courier didn’t have the balls to publish it, so here it is in full for all
to read and share:
Guild elections, the Kremlin & Vegetarian Sandwiches
The sharp-eyed reader may have noticed that last week played
host to the annual Guild Election beauty contest. Being asked to write an article on the
elections for The Courier really whet
my appetite; finally, a chance to get stuck into a left wing institution in
general (the NUS) and to wax lyrical about all that’s wrong with our Guild
specifically. In-fact it didn’t turn out that way; what started out as a
cognitive explosion of passionate ideas decrying the inherent left-wing bias of
the Union movement, soon turned to utter boredom, complete disillusionment and
finally, an unrelenting, grinding paralysis of apathy.
With some positions uncontested and most others fought-over
by candidates promising near identical manifestoes focusing on issues lifted
straight from the script of an edition of children’s TV programme Newsround,
there was barely a recycled sheet of A4 paper to separate them. Indeed, if
you had an hour of your life to waste last week, then you may have watched some
of the campaign videos or read some of the campaign posters. If you survived
the mind numbing resultant coma, you’ll have noted how incredibly formulaic and
‘samey’ they all seemed. Most listed either housing or mental health as the
primary plank of their manifesto (wonder why?), reinforced by several secondary
Lizo Mzimba-inspired pledges concerning the environment, fair trade coffee and
the world changing notion of talking to estate agents on your behalf. The
battle of mindless mundane mediocrity was on. A sort of general malaise set in.
Voters turned off. Some dribbled. Probably.
Despite a decidedly unethical attempt by one candidate to
defame the good character of the incumbent Guild President by leaking a non-story
to the national press, none of the candidates really managed to grab any
headlines. Indeed, no amount of distinctly unsustainable, unethical A4 paper plastered
all over campus will ever make up for the lack of genuine excitement or buzz
that an engaging election should create among the student body. This is partly
because none of the candidates actually got to grips with the fact that it is not
the source of our coffee but the serious lack of quality Union facilities that
students really care about. To admit this, would be to confess the perpetual
failure of the Guild to keep pace with the needs of the modern Aberystwyth
student, a failing that those standing for re-election are at least partly
culpable for. This of course is with the exception of Meakin’s excellent work
attracting Starbucks to the Union. But one such initiative is not enough, and
the Guild’s services will appear even less satisfying with fees set to rise to
£9,000 per annum from September. Students who pay more will expect more. Indeed,
far too many manifestos forwarded empty hyperbole which didn’t actually mean anything
at all and served only to underline the broad feeling that there was no single
candidate in any position really capable of thinking of (let alone delivering)
the kind of ‘outside the box’ solutions required to drag the Guild kicking and
screaming into the 21st Century. Most students care little about
whether we are recycling our ethically sourced eco-friendly fair trade coffee
cups or not when the facilities in which we spend our time fall so far short of
even the most basic expectations. This dissonance between what the students
really wanted, and what the candidates actually promised, was the true unspoken
cause of such enormous voter apathy at the heart of this election.
The Guild is in-fact distanced by a yawning chasm from the
actual student body. Distanced that is,
in geographical, ideational and relational terms. Most of us know there’re some offices at the
back of the Underground somewhere, but the vast majority of students never
venture past the pasties and toilets into the Kremlinesque maze of closed doors
and peeling paint where the Guild’s elected officials are caged. Instead, for many students, the only part of
the Guild that we’re aware of or actually visit are the commercial enterprises;
the disappointing offerings presented by the Union bars and the Union Shop when
we’re up on campus for lectures or seminars. For the rest of the time, around
two thirds of students live at the end of a very tiring and very tall hill; at
the bottom of which is a bustling town offering shops with pricing and quality
as their core values, not high minded (and high priced) principals of ethics
and sustainability as might be found in the Union facilities. The town pubs,
bars and clubs offer drinks at half of the price of the Union, and in an
environment which is twice as appealing.
The real problem with the Guild is that it’s been losing money for
years, partly due to a lack of imagination or innovation. Consequently, there’s no money to change anything,
and there’s no money because nobody goes, and nobody hoes because nothing changes. However, something has got to change
before the whole system follows the Soviet Union and grinds to a juddering
financial halt. Wat students and the
Guild really need are experienced people who are not just willing but capable
of working with University staff to draw-up a student-focused yet equitable,
financially-sustainable plan to ensure the Guild’s long-term survival. This probably doesn’t involve higher wages
for Union staff and more vegetarian sandwich options as promised by one
successful candidate.
So, having established that the manifesto pledges weren’t
worth the paper that Lizo’s guiding hand wrote them on (think of all those poor
trees) who were the Guild Elections
actually for, or rather who do they benefit? Well, the answer is pretty obvious
I’m afraid; despite the promises, it is not the student body en-masse,
definitely not me and definitely not you. The successful candidates have won
some CV points in the form of an impressive sounding title and as an added
bonus, the Sabbatical Officers get to stay in Aber for another year, paid for
by you (despite your Union losing tens of thousands of pounds each year). And
this is the final point. Welcome to local politics, rule number one; it’s not
about your needs, it’s about the politicians’. Next time you cast a vote, pause
and question who that vote really benefits; you or the candidate?
I’ll leave you with Jeremy Paxman: “You cannot trust a word any politician says and if you shake hands with them, you ought to count your fingers afterwards. They are not the people you would want your son or daughter to marry”.
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I’ll leave you with Jeremy Paxman: “You cannot trust a word any politician says and if you shake hands with them, you ought to count your fingers afterwards. They are not the people you would want your son or daughter to marry”.
If you like this blog, please show your support by tweeting, posting and citing as often as you can.
Also, click now to follow me on Twitter: @HortonEddison
Follow @HortonEddison
Tweet