OPINIONS

No Free Lunch: SCSCOPSG: Stanford Coalition for Skeptics, Cynics, and Those Generally Opposed to an Over Politicized Student Government.

With ASSU election season upon us, now is a good time to take a quick look at last year’s outcomes. In 2010, the Stanford Students of Color Coalition (SOCC) endorsed twelve candidates in the ASSU Undergraduate Senate race; ten were elected. The Queer Coalition endorsed ten students; seven were elected.  The success rates of candidates endorsed by these two organizations — 70 percent for the Queer Coalition, 83 percent for SOCC and 86 percent for candidates holding endorsements from both organizations — is both astonishing, compared to the 43 percent success rate in the general field, and troubling. The fact that these two interest groups hold so much sway in ASSU election outcomes is perhaps the best proof that Stanford student government has become intensely politicized, with opaque interest groups, meaningless coalitions and buzz-word laden empty rhetoric.

Start with the interest groups. They represent the idea that the interests of colored, queer, Jewish, first-generation, low-income, or environmentally conscious Stanford students are somehow separate and different from the general interests of the student body. For one, this seems flawed considering the stated goal of most of these interest groups is to strengthen community as a whole. How is voting in a block of similarly self-identified students advancing this cause? Second, if an ASSU senator actively advances a pro-colored, queer, or Jewish agenda, they risk failing their more important duty, representing the interests of the entire student body. The ASSU Election Commission makes matters worse, adding legitimacy to the endorsement system by making them centrally available on the official website. Banning endorsements altogether is obviously extreme, but the Election Commission has no reasonable interest in recognizing them.

On to the coalitions and buzz-words. Last year 12 senate candidates ran as a part of the Stanford United Now (SUN) coalition with a platform centered on promoting “student government that enacts pragmatic change on the issues important to all students.” Will all those opposed to pragmatic change or those who don’t care about issues that students care about please stand up? It’s barely a stretch to assume every member of SUN was also for promoting wellness, mental health, special fee reform and diversity. And don’t forget they were all green, too. While a platform comprised of tackling these buzz-word issues sounds admirable, it is nearly universal, and consequently meaningless.

The ASSU Senate itself is a glorified “Ways and Means committee,” holding the key to the special fee chest, coupled with event planning and sponsorship responsibilities. So what actionable steps can ASSU senators take to “promote diversity”? They could seek to make funding for minority student communities easier or harder to access. So tell us specifically which you intend to do. They could also plan or sponsor more events celebrating the diversity of the Stanford community. Tell us, in exact terms, what events you envision. “Special fees”? We’ll take a wild guess and go ahead and say most candidates this year will be pro-reform. But do you plan on making funds more accessible or less accessible? Do you want the process to be more direct — decided by the student population — or less direct — a greater role for the appropriations committee? And what do you plan on doing with the refund loophole? We could close it or make the groups that people request refunds for suffer the consequences of students voting with their feet.

And finally “wellness” and “mental-health.” How exactly do you plan to reduce the stress of a 10-week quarter system at one of the most competitive universities in the world? The Stanford student body is already the proud owner of the most expensive pre-school classroom imaginable, the ASSU Wellness Room. We probably don’t need another one or a playground for that matter, but if you want to build either, tell us. Or let us know exactly what promoting “wellness” means for the average Stanford student.

We understand that most campaigns in the “real world” are won and lost on vague and idealistic promises, but this is exactly why Stanford student government should not try to emulate California state government. Those we elect to ASSU Senate will be dealing with small detailed changes and specific events, which (sorry to say) will not change the world. And yet we as students allow candidates who avoid anything vaguely resembling a detail in favor of sweeping, general, fluffy campaigns to win.

The take home message is three fold. For the ASSU Election Commission: there is a legitimate, community building interest in refusing to recognize endorsements by any group or person. For those seeking elected office: rhetoric is cheap, especially buzz-words like “diversity,” “special fee reform” and “wellness.” Tell us what you actually plan to do, and do it by using words that have actual meaning. Finally, for everyone: don’t vote as a block. And more importantly, demand from candidates an actionable platform that differentiates them from others. Everyone wants a more cohesive, diverse, inclusive Stanford community. Let’s decide for ourselves who can deliver.

 

If you’re interested in joining, being endorsed by, or ranting about SCSCOPSG email daveg4@stanford.edu or zhoberg@stanford.edu.

 

 

  • Robin Thomas

    It’s really too bad how little students seem to care about the ASSU. (Aren’t something like 65% of voters in the elections freshmen?) Stanford has the best and brightest minds around; if students really were “Associated Students,” think of how much they could accomplish for the benefit of the whole world! But hey, who can blame people for being pessimistic about the ASSU? It really is pretty tough to see what concrete things they accomplish.

    Maybe the ASSU is accomplishing wonderful things all the time — if they are, I wish we’d hear about it. All we hear about instead are anal-retentive, meticulous, bureaucratic senate meetings, half-baked ideas like (gasp!) the Wellness Room, misuse of funding, and election platforms and slogans that are almost completely identical. It really does look like a bunch of kids, elected through a popularity contest, who are trying to legitimize themselves by being all “professional” with their fancy parliamentary procedures.

    The ASSU’s up against a fair amount, don’t get me wrong. For starters, the entire thing turns over every year, and so I’d assume that the elected officials don’t actually learn the ropes of the organization until it’s almost time for them to leave office.

    But there’s really not a whole lot anyone can do about that. What bums me out is that so many of the kids running for office seem to think the only way they can accomplish big things at Stanford, or can leave their mark on the university, is by getting elected. If you believe you need to be elected to something in order to get noticed or to accomplish anything, I think you’re really selling yourself short. It would be great if students got elected for their past accomplishments, instead of getting elected based on the promise of future accomplishments. Because seriously, like these guys are saying in this article, students really all want more-or-less the same things, right? So when you have a bunch of kids running for office that have near-identical plans for the future, then the elections really are just a popularity and rhetoric contest.

    Come on, Stanford. Stop taking yourselves so seriously, and start taking seriously your dreams and your visions. Get something done already.

  • Jonathan

    Some of the authors’ points do have some merit, particularly the recommendation to potential candidates to “tell us what you actually plan to do.” Sound advice in any political arena. However, the approach to this point is filled with glaring potholes that belie a rather circuitous and unfortunate route to this destination.

    It is easy, especially in a place as generally welcoming as Stanford, to forget that the world treats many of us vastly differently. A colored student will be treated by law enforcement differently than the authors would be treated. In many places in the US, it is dangerous to identify as a queer person. It is not fair, and it is something we are working to change, but it is a fact. Combating this is a long and slow struggle, and it starts with the recognition that the very identity of many of our students is under constant, demeaning attack. These student groups exist at least in part to affirm that identity; they are formed from shared life experiences that are dramatically different from those of most students. So the interests of the students that the authors choose to list are, indeed, going to be different from those of the “general” student body.

  • Zack

    Jonathan, we agree with all that–the issue is that this is a very protected an unique environment. While there are probably still some inequities, for the most part this campus is one of the most accepting plots of land on the face of the planet. ASSU positions have absolutely no power, and should not be attempting to project any power, over anything outside of stanford. And even within stanford campus, their purview is limited, only really dealing with the areas they talked about in the article. So should stanford students stop advocating issues, promoting justice and equality? Absolutely. But should people running for an office that essentially plans social events which at best preach to the choir and determine funding policy minutia pretend that by voting for them you are curing cancer, ending racial hatred and taking panda bears off the endangered list? No.

    Robin’s point is a great extension of that–ASSU is simply not the realm to be dealing with those issues, and it is sad that there are students who want to try and make the changes in our world which would deal with actual problems and decide that the best way to do it is by running for ASSU. These elections should be determined by who has better plans for making this university run smoothly and promoting general student efficacy (dose of own medicine, that was pretty vague. for example, we could change how the delineation between undergraduate special fees and grad special fees are administered–under the current policy a group that wants money from both could get 100% support from the undergrads, 49% from the grads, and not get any money at all. ASSU senate could change this procedurally.) The ASSU is a very important body regarding campus life–nothing more, nothing less.

  • Adam Klein

    Thanks Zack and Dave. Couldn’t have said it better. To think that such a thing as an anti-diversity candidate exists running for ASSU on Stanford’s campus is ridiculous. Being endorsed by SOCC should not be an automatic ‘yes’ vote, they should also have real, original plans, not just paying lip service to what the most powerful interest groups on our campus want to hear.