thebattalion l thursday,
february 20, 2014
l serving
texas a&m since 1893
l first paper free – additional copies $1 l © 2014 student media
ELECTIONS CANDIDATE PROFILES PG 4-5
Gus Blessing
By Aimee Breaux
Kyle Kelly
Kasey Kram
VOTING INFORMATION
Voting is available at voting.tamu. edu at 9 a.m. Thursday and remains open until 3 p.m. Friday
Matt Neumann An online debate with three participating candidates is available at askags.com/election2014
Photos by Jenna Rabel and David Cohen — THE BATTALION
THE VIRTUE OF HINDSIGHT As students vote for his successor, Reid Joseph reflects on his tenure as SBP Annabelle Hutchinson, city reporter, sits down with student body president Reid Joseph. THE BATTALION: Looking back at your campaign last year, what sticks out in your mind? JOSEPH: We as a campaign team decided that we could not control whether we won or lost the election. Therefore, we would not base whether we succeeded or not on whether we won or lost because we couldn’t control that. We wanted to base our success on something we could control. And what we could control is how we treated people, how we represented the Aggie core values and ultimately how we represented our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. We believe that if we did those three things, we would be a success
Q&A:
whether we won or lost.
THE BATTALION: How are the expectations set during campaigning different from the reality of being SBP? JOSEPH: Expectations and reality are very rarely the same. The same is true with this. So campaign is very different from your job in office. Campaign is an all-out sprint, and your term in office is a sprint as well. However, it is really a 14-month sprint. Being in office is more difficult than campaigning.
Bradley D’Souza
The Battalion iting low student participation, the Texas A&M Election Commission chose not to pursue student body president debates this election season. As a result, an online SBP debate emerged, allowing students to both interact with their candidates and learn more about what each candidate hopes to accomplish if elected. AskAgs.com, an online questionand-answer forum launched last year, has hosted an online debate. The election commission has traditionally held debates with the candidates. Allison Krenzien, election commissioner, said previous debates netted low student turnout and the commission opted to produce and distribute an informational candidate guide this year in hopes of reaching more students. The virtual debate allows visitors to post questions for the candidates and to vote on questions they want answered. The questions receiving
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Student body president Reid Joseph will pass the reins on to his successor, who will be determined by the results of this week’s elections.
THE BATTALION: What is the hardest part of your job?
you work, there will always be one more thing to do.
JOSEPH: The hardest part of being in office is easily this: that you are pulled in a hundred different directions and you are also a student. And you can’t please everybody. No matter how hard
THE BATTALION: Were you able to achieve everything you campaigned on?
SITE HOSTS DEBATE TO FILL VOID Election commission opted not to have SBP debate
David Cohen — THE BATTALION
the most votes are given to the candidates to answer, with all candidate responses being posted by the website simultaneously. Tyler Mandry, founder of AskAgs. com and senior computer science and applied mathematics double major, said AskAgs constructed the virtual debate to give students a way to interact directly with their SBP candidates. He said the virtual debate affords students the ability to learn details about candidates’ platforms, rather than just hearing names as they walk around campus. “I realized, especially with the SBP campaigns, most of what all it involved was standing outside and yelling at people,” Mandry said. “That’s all well and good, but a lot of people weren’t really interested in learning about the candidates themselves and what they stood for. The reason most people didn’t is because it’s really hard to do that. You have to go to a bunch of different websites and read really long articles about them.” Mandry said while the virtual debate can provide increased accessibility and responsiveness, a potential downside to the online format is the See Debate on page 2
months left and we’re working hard. However, we have accomplished a great deal of what we set out to do and that is a tremendous testament to SGA as well as my executive cabinet.
JOSEPH: No. But I still have two
See Joseph on page 4
CAMPAIGN SPENDING LIMITS DRAW MIXED OPINIONS Aimee Breaux
The Battalion ehind the minimal increases this year in the Student Government Association campaigning budget limits is a careful consideration of the nature of campaigning on campus. The budget increased from $1,800 to $2,000 for SBP candidates and from $150 to $200 for student senators. Additionally, student senators running as co-candidates can increase their personal budgets by $50 for each additional candidate involved. Christopher Russo, speaker of Student Senate and participant of the Student Senate committee in charge of setting campaign budgets, said the reason for the budget bumps was in part to account for inflation and to combat marketing disadvantages toward senators running as co-candidates. Russo said when candidates decide to co-brand themselves, all parties involved must deduct costs from their budget. Under this system, Russo said if five cocandidates spend $50 dollars on fliers then the effective cost is $250.
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John Benson — THE BATTALION
Students hold campaign banners outside the MSC on Wednesday. “There was a concern that cocandidacy was a disadvantage in marketing especially for fliers and things like that,” Russo said. “So we gave candidates a little more money total if they work on cocandidacy, just so it wouldn’t be
so much of a penalty.” Russo said the rules and regulations committee considers the competitiveness of the races and the relative perceived imporSee Finance on page 4
2/19/14 10:11 PM