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ANALYSIS: OsunDecides: Events, issues that may shape governorship election

ANALYSIS: OsunDecides: Events, issues that may shape governorship election

Voters in Osun State, South-west Nigeria, will on Saturday file out to elect their governor for the next four years, beginning from November when the tenure of the incumbent, Isiaka Oyetola, will end.

But Mr Oyetola has again been presented by his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) for reelection. And his closest rival in 2018, Ademola Adeleke, a former senator and younger brother of the state’s first governor, Isiaka Adeleke, is also again the candidate of the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

Three other candidates in the race are also popular. They are Akin Ogunbiyi of the Accord Party; Goke Omigbodun of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and the former deputy speaker of the House of Representatives, Lasun Yusuf, who is flying the flag of the Labour Party (LP).

With the atmosphere charged a day to the contest, PREMIUM TIMES has identified some key issues and developments that may likely determine where the scale of victory may be tilted at the end of the poll.

The situation on the ground indicates that the contest may again be a two-horse race between Governor Oyetola and Mr Adeleke, with the other candidates sharing the ‘leftover’ votes.

Controversial primaries

Neither the ruling APC nor the opposition PDP has fully recovered from the controversies that marred their primaries.

It was only on Thursday that the governor heaved a sigh of relief after the Federal High Court in Abuja dismissed a suit challenging his nomination by the APC.

In the party’s controversial direct primaries held across the state on February 19, a former secretary to the state government, Moshood Adeoti, and Mr Yusuf (who is now the LP candidate), emerged as first and second runners-up.

The controversy was an offshoot of the rivalry between Mr Oyetola and his predecessor, now Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola. The latter supported Mr Adeoti in the primaries and continues to oppose Mr Oyetola’s bid for reelection.

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Rauf Aregbesola, Nigerian Minister of Interior.
Rauf Aregbesola, Nigerian Minister of Interior.

Mr Aregbesola is behind The Osun Progressives (TOP), a splinter group of the ruling party that is pushing the opposition against Mr Oyetola in the party.

But with the verdict delivered at the court on Thursday, it is not clear if Mr Adeoti would be appealing the judgement. His suit was predicated on the argument that Mr Oyetola had taken part in the primary without resigning his membership of the ruling party’s national caretaker committee then led by Yobe State Governor, Mala Buni.

However, unlike the APC, which organised a single primary with all the stakeholders participating, the PDP conducted two parallel primaries on March 8.

One was held at Women and Children Development Initiative Foundation (WOCDIF) centre, Osogbo, and attended by major stakeholders and founding members of the party. In contrast, the faction led by the Adeleke ‘dynasty’ held its own at Osogbo City Stadium.

Olagunsoye Oyinlola
Olagunsoye Oyinlola

The primary at WOCDIF was attended by two former deputy national chairmen of the party, Shuaib Oyedokun and Tajudeen Oladipo; former Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola and his deputy while in office, Olusola Obada; former secretary to the state government, Fatai Akinbade; factional chairman, Wale Ojo, and his predecessor, Soji Adagunodo, and also Mr Adeleke’s cousin and then governorship aspirant on the platform of the party, Dele Adeleke.

Also at the event were former senator Olu Alabi, and Dotun Babayemi, who won the primary.

But at the stadium where Mr Adeleke was nominated were a factional chairman of the party in the state, Sunday Bisi; former national secretary of PDP, Wale Oladipupo; the senator representing Osun East District, Adenigba Fadahunsi; four-term member of the House of Representatives from Oriade/Obokun Federal Constituency, Wole Oke; former chairman of the Association of Local Government of Nigeria (ALGON), Lere Oyewunmi, among others.


This was, however, the faction that hosted both the representatives of the national leadership of the party and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

But since the recognition of Mr Adeleke as the authentic candidate of the party, members of the other faction have not thrown in the towel. Not even a loss of some of the cases challenging Mr Adeleke’s emergence in court has settled the rift.

Therefore, while APC seems to have been able to manage the crisis relatively better, the PDP, though popular on the streets, could be more affected by the fallouts of its own.

Defections

As a fallout of their acrimonious primaries, the two leading political parties have suffered gales of defections, exchanging prominent members while some other fringe political parties also claimed some of their members. But the ‘casualty’ on the side of the PDP seems to be higher than that of the ruling party.

Apart from the defection of Mr Yusuf to LP, the only significant member of APC who left for the opposition PDP was the former commissioner for local government and chieftaincy affairs under Mr Aregbesola, Kolapo Alimi.

But while Mr Ogunbiyi left the PDP for the Accord Party, other prominent PDP members including Mr Adeleke’s running mate in 2018, Albert Adeogun; factional chairman of the party, Wale Ojo; former member of the House of Representatives, Ayodele Asalu, and a House of Representatives aspirant, Soji Ibikunle, among others, defected to the APC.

Religion

Religious sentiments may also be a major factor in the election, especially following the raging war over the choice of a running mate by the presidential flag bearers of the ruling APC. With the stiff opposition of the Christian communities to the Muslim-Muslim ticket, voters in Osun, where Muslims are the majority, may have issues with the candidate of the PDP.

Mr Adeleke introduces himself on his posters as Nurudeen Ademola Jackson Adeleke. Despite the “Nurudeen”, a Muslim name, Mr Adeleke is seen more as a Christian with his constant appearance in western attire and is popularly known as “Jackson.” He was never publicly addressed as Nurudeen.

Meanwhile, the choice of Kola Adewusi, a Christian and former chairman of Ife East Local Government Area, may have further stirred the hornet’s nest.

But on his part, Mr Oyetola, a son of an Islamic cleric from Iragbiji, headquarters of Boripe Local Government Area of the state, has a Christian from Ikire, Irewole Local Government Area, Benedict Alabi, as his deputy. This “balance” may earn them the sympathy of some voters.

It would be recalled that in 2018, Muslims Rights Concern (MURIC), an Islamic organisation, expressed concern over Mr Adeleke’s promise to return mission schools in the state to their old owners. MURIC accused the PDP candidate of taking Muslims for a ride in the state.

Governance

Though the governor may not have performed poorly, given the resources available to him and when compared with other state governors, the poor performance of the APC federal government led by President Muhammadu Buhari may affect Mr Oyetola’s chances.

The global economic crisis occasioned largely by the plummeting oil prices and the coronavirus pandemic is one of the reasons advanced by the government for not being able to do better.

But the governor’s aides said he deserves commendation for keeping Osun afloat, especially with the regular payment of salaries to workers, unlike his predecessors.

Speaking with PREMIUM TIMES, the senior special assistant to the governor on students’ affairs and social mobilisation, Kehinde Ayantunji, said Mr Oyetola promised to pay workers their full wages and has kept the promise.

“Despite the dwindling resources and the debt being repaid, the governor has insisted that he would not renege on his promises. He has consistently told those of us working with him to bear the brunt while he fulfils his pledge to the workers and the pensioners,” Mr Ayantunji said.

But apart from salary payment, many residents of Osun have claimed times are hard and are seeking a change in power, with the belief that a new leader may lead to a new lease of life.

Education qualification

While many voters may not be unhappy with the incumbent, they are also not impressed by Mr Adeleke, the leading opposition candidate, over his academic qualification and competence.

Each time Mr Adeleke speaks in English in public, social media is awash with derisive posts by members of the public, either ridiculing his pronunciations or grammar.

Mr Adeleke’s certificate issue had been on the front burner in 2018, forcing the flag bearer to publicly announce his purported graduation from Atlanta Metropolitan College in America in May 2021.

Senator Iyiola Omisore
Iyiola Omisore

Omisore’s emergence

Since his intervention in 2018 during the supplementary election between Messrs Oyetola and Adeleke, deploying his third force to give victory to the former in the keenly contested election, Iyiola Omisore, has remained a pillar of the ruling APC.

Therefore, with his emergence as the national secretary of the ruling party, Mr Omisore, a founding member of the Alliance for Democracy, APC’s legacy party, before joining the PDP where he won a senatorial election from detention, has never had it so good with the so-called progressives.

It will be recalled that Mr Omisore garnered over 128,000 votes in the 2018 election on the platform of the SDP, thereby contributing greatly to why the election went into a rerun.

The popularity of Mr Omisore may improve the fortunes of the APC after joining its fold as a national leader of the party.

The All Progressives Congress (APC) national leader, Bola Tinubu. [CREDIT: Tinubu Twitter Page]
The All Progressives Congress (APC) national leader, Bola Tinubu. [CREDIT: Tinubu Twitter Page]

Tinubu’s emergence as APC presidential candidate

The emergence of Bola Tinubu, a former Lagos State Governor, as the presidential candidate of the ruling APC is another factor that may help the incumbent to retain his seat.

It would be recalled that as soon as he was announced the winner of the party’s presidential primary in June, the outgoing governor of Ekiti State and Chairman of Nigeria’s Governors’ Forum (NGF), Kayode Fayemi, described him as a game changer.

Many of Mr Tinubu’s followers and allies who had threatened to work against the candidate of the party at the poll in Ekiti, especially the leadership of the South-west Agenda for Asiwaju (SWAGA), quickly embraced dialogue and worked for the party’s candidate following Mr Tinubu’s intervention.

The same scenario seems to be playing out in Osun already, as some of the members of Mr Aregbesola-backed TOP have sheathed their swords, and have resolved to work for Mr Oyetola.

One of them is the former speaker of the state’s House of Assembly, Najeem Salaam, who is said to command a large following in Ejigbo, and other major towns in Osun West Senatorial District, where Mr Adeleke also hails from.

With the various realignments in the state, this election is unlikely to repeat the controversy of the last one in 2018, which was decided by 442 votes after Mr Oyetola overtook Mr Adeleke in the controversial supplementary polls conducted in seven polling units.


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The surprise ‘Event’ that’s shaken up the election campaign

A composite image showing Scott Morrison and Anthony Albanese.

When Harold MacMillan was asked what was most likely to throw governments off course, the former British prime minister is reported to have responded: “Events, dear boy. Events.”

And in the Nerf war that has been the 2022 election campaign so far — in which 90 per cent of the noise has been candidates caterwauling about something dastardly their opponent is secretly planning to do — the arrival of an Event, an Actual Thing That Has Actually Happened, had a shocking effect today.

China has signed a security pact with Solomon Islands. The terms are undisclosed but if it’s anything like the draft that leaked recently, it’ll create a hell of a potential Chinese military toe-hold right in our backyard.

Such a decision was probably inevitable and most likely timed during an election campaign for strategic cover but Shadow Foreign Minister Penny Wong described the development as the greatest foreign policy failure in the Pacific region since World War II.

Dealing with local bullies is difficult, as any primary school kid knows. And if the bully is hugely cashed-up and renting out local tree houses for silly money so they can potentially get a clear shot at you, it’s unsettling for sure.

Seniority struggle 

The government last week dispatched Minister for the Pacific Zed Seselja to go and have a chat to Solomon Island’s PM about all this.

Wong — who is frequently withering, but who this morning seemed to have been switched to Max Dehydrator for this particular subject — asked why the government had deputed a “junior woodchuck” to deal with a situation of such urgency.

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Play Video. Duration: 1 minute 2 seconds

‘Worst foreign policy blunder in the Pacific since the end of WWII’: Penny Wong

The Prime Minister’s response to this question — while upsettingly non-contradictory of Wong’s central assessment of Senator Seselja’s seniority (Zed’s dead, Baby) — seemed to be that to send someone more important would have looked like bullying. Which does make one tangentially wonder why he didn’t, for instance, send someone a bit more junior to rissole Christine Holgate, but there you go.

Either way, the deal is done. And the government which after nine years is looking for re-election substantially on the grounds of national security (you can’t cross the road in this campaign without Peter Dutton throwing a new patrol boat at you) must also endure the horrid truth: While guarding the ramparts against an ambitious China, we somehow accidentally managed not only to rent the Port of Darwin to Beijing, but also allow the superpower to secure a Pacific weekender.

One last thing: A generous foreign aid program is one of the prophylactics often employed by wealthy countries to defray the chances of being rogered by a local aggressor.

And there are other reasons to be generous too, as noted by one Scott Morrison in his first speech to Parliament in 2007, in which he quoted Bono and called upon the new government of Kevin Rudd not only to honour its lofty ambitions on foreign aid but to go even further.

Scott Morrison looks at machinery through a glass panel with reporters behind him.
The government is looking for re-election substantially on the grounds of national security.(ABC News: Andy Kennedy)

“The need is not diminishing, nor can our support. It’s the Australian thing to do,” he said. (Years later, upon becoming treasurer, Morrison remembered that the other Australian thing to do is not to give too much to foreigners, and in his first budget in 2016 filleted foreign aid, which now is around a billion less in unadjusted terms than it was when the Coalition won power.)

Foreign aid is scheduled to decrease further according to the Coalition’s budget projections, but Labor has not as yet backed away from its 2019 election pledge to increase it.

Three years ago, Bill Shorten promised a $1.6 billion increase as a costed campaign promise. This time? Unclear.

Industrial relations face the pub test

After a wee spell on the bench, we’re pleased to welcome industrial relations back onto the policy debate field. Well, if you can count the Coalition shouting “Union Thugs! Let’s Get Em!” and Labor shouting “They’re Coming For Ya Pay Packet!”

What’s actually happened is that the government has confirmed it’ll have another crack at legislating its industrial relations reforms, which it sort of went a bit limp on last year due to an extreme lack of Senate interest.

What is the status of this legislation? To use a pub analogy, it’s like ordering a schnitzel with chips and vegetables and the vegetables don’t turn up but you haven’t as yet complained at the bar. Officially, you ordered the veg. The records will confirm that you’re a veg-orderer. But what’s your next move?

Anthony Albanese, wearing an orange high-vis vest, takes a selfie with a large group of workers.
Industrial relations has officially re-entered the policy debate field.(ABC News: Adam Kennedy)

The vegetables, in this instance, are some proposed adjustments to the Better Off Overall Test (known as the BOOT, in case you’ve been puzzled while listening to the radio today).

The PM says “no major changes” will be made to the BOOT. But Industrial Relations Minister Michaelia Cash (also silent on the BOOT) is keen to increase penalties for thuggish unions.

Also surfacing today: climate change scares! Welcome back.

Which team do you bat for?

The question of what sports girls and boys should play, and whether kids who don’t fit neatly in either column should be excluded, seems to be continuing as a campaign issue.

Today Anthony Albanese was asked to state his position and Morrison declared that “Australians are getting pretty fed-up with having to walk on eggshells every day because they may or may not say something one day that’s going to upset someone”.

A blonde woman looks at the camera in a coastal setting
Katherine Deves, Morrison’s pick for the NSW seat of Warringah, apologised after she described transgender children as “surgically multilated and serilised” in deleted tweets from November last year. (Supplied)

For a policy haymaker, this has a strong whiff of John Howard in 2000, who — during the Labor national conference — suddenly announced that his government would outlaw IVF services for lesbian couples, leaving Labor’s then-leader Kim Beazley with a bruising live debate on how to respond. Here’s the ABC’s PM report of that day, with a fond wave to the late Mark Colvin.

It was warfare for a while, and this issue stuck around. Even Penny Wong, when she had children with her partner Sophie Allouache, was obliged to leave her own home state for medical assistance.

It seems a long time ago that anyone thought denying same-sex couples the joy and commitment of parenthood was a political winner. Now it’s children themselves who are in the frame. Nice.

Man on man action! Tonight, on pay-per-view!

There is poor visibility on the subject of just how many campaign debates there will be.

But the first is tonight at 7pm AEST, when Morrison and Albanese will jointly face an audience of public questioners.

It’s being hosted by Sky News and the Courier Mail. Are either of those companies offering free access? No, they aren’t. But we have people there and we will bring you the news as it happens. You can follow along here.

Albanese has also confirmed that his party’s campaign launch will be in Perth on May 4. This is unusual because a. it’s in Perth (never happens, even when the Labor leader’s from Perth) and b. launching a campaign several weeks out from the poll date is against the trend of recent decades. The longer a party holds out before the campaign launch, the longer it can continue to claim public funding for travel.

Good day

The seat of Gilmore suddenly gets not one but two road funding promises.

Kind of like waiting for a bus in Adelaide: nothing for six years, and then suddenly two at once. (Sorry Adelaide. I love you and you are my soul. But I attained my majority in a troubled public transport moment.)

Bad day

If your job is running a charity in which adorable dogs are deployed to help visually impaired humans, can you ever actually have a bad day? Survey says: YES

What to watch out for tomorrow

As the fallout from Wednesday’s debate will no doubt fall, the deadline is fast approaching for anyone who harbours hopes of running for a spot in the House of Representatives or Senate to nominate themselves with the Australian Electoral Commission. Midday tomorrow, to be precise.

It’s also, importantly, the last opportunity parties have to dump any candidates they no longer want to take to the finish line. Keep your eyes peeled for any last-minute adjustments. 

Catch up on today’s stories

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Play Video. Duration: 2 minutes 34 seconds

The election campaign has gone distinctly negative, as Andrew Probyn reports.
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A timeline of events culminating in Sen. Mike Lee’s texts to Mark Meadows trying to overturn the 2020 election.

A timeline of events culminating in Sen. Mike Lee’s texts to Mark Meadows trying to overturn the 2020 election.

In a text sent on Nov. 7, the day that many media outlets declared the election for current Democratic President Joe Biden, Lee asked Meadows to deliver the following message to Trump.

“We the undersigned offer our unequivocal support for you to exhaust every legal and constitutional remedy at your disposal to restore Americans faith in our elections,” he wrote.

What followed were months of correspondence where Lee offered advice on means to overturn the election and asked for guidance on what he should be saying, according to the reporting by CNN.

Lee and Trump have an uneven history dating back to before the latter was elected president in 2016. Here is a breakdown of the events preceding and surrounding Lee’s texts with Meadows.

  • July 2016: Lee attempts, and fails, to stop Trump from becoming the Republican Party’s presidential nominee while gathered in Cleveland with Utah’s GOP delegates at the Republican National Convention.

  • October 2016: In a since-deleted Facebook video, Lee calls for Trump to step down as a presidential candidate after a 2005 “Access Hollywood” tape surfaced in which Trump makes lewd comments about women. In his video, Lee says, “You, sir, are the distraction. Your conduct, sir, is the distraction.”

  • November 2016: Trump wins the 2016 presidential election, defeating Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton. Lee reveals that he voted for independent candidate Evan McMullin, saying, “I had signaled in the past concerns that I had with my party’s nominee. I’ve made no secret about that and I don’t feel any desire to rehearse those now.… I saw in Evan McMullin an opportunity to register a protest vote.”

  • In the months following Trump’s victory, Lee begins to warm to Trump. He later says he can’t identify exactly when his feelings toward the president began to shift but that they agree more often than not.

  • June 2018: U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announces his retirement. Lee and his brother, Utah Supreme Court Justice Thomas Lee, are included on a short-list for candidates. Current Justice Brett Kavanaugh is selected instead.

  • November 2019: Lee announces he will co-chair Trump’s reelection campaign in Utah. At the time of the announcement, Lee said, “Look, some of you in this room, some of you in our state were wise enough to see where this was heading a few years ago. You were quick and astute enough to see the gift that President Trump and Vice President Pence would be to the United States of America. Some of us took a little bit more time.”

  • Sept. 9, 2020: U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg dies. Trump retains both Lee and his brother on his list of potential nominees. Current Justice Amy Coney Barrett eventually receives the nod.

  • Sept. 23, 2020: Trump refuses to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses the 2020 election. In response, freshman Utah Sen. Mitt Romney tweets, “Any suggestion that a president might not respect this Constitutional guarantee is both unthinkable and unacceptable.” Lee’s spokesperson, Conn Carroll, says, “Sen. Lee is entirely confident that both President Trump and Joe Biden will honor the results of this November’s election.”

  • Oct. 7-8, 2020: Lee tweets “We’re not a democracy.” He follows up the controversial message with another tweet a day later, writing, “Democracy isn’t the objective; liberty, peace, and prospefity (sic) are. We want the human condition to flourish. Rank democracy can thwart that.”

  • Oct. 28, 2020: At an Arizona campaign rally, Lee compares Trump to Book of Mormon hero Captain Moroni, saying, “To my Mormon friends, my Latter-day Saint friends, think of him as Captain Moroni. He seeks not power, but to pull it down.” He later walked back his comments, somewhat, calling them “perhaps awkward” in a Facebook post.

  • Nov. 4, 2020: Lee urges voters to remain calm while votes are counted, saying in a written statement, “Once again, we have an extremely close presidential election on our hands. It’s best for everyone to step back from the spin and allow the vote counters to do their job. The most important thing is that we have a fair count that the American people can trust.”

  • Nov. 7, 2020: The Associated Press calls the election for Biden. Lee sends a message of support to Meadows, along with several texts concerning pro-Trump lawyer Sidney Powell — who is currently facing disciplinary action in multiple states — in one text writing, “Sydney (sic) Powell is saying that she needs to get in to see the president, but she’s being kept away from him. Apparently she has a strategy to keep things alive and put several states back in play. Can you help her get in?” Nov. 7 is the beginning of CNN’s reporting on Lee’s correspondence with Meadows.

  • Nov. 9, 2020: Even as a pair of his fellow Utah lawmakers acknowledge Biden as president-elect, Lee refuses to admit Trump’s defeat, releasing a written statement, saying, “I look forward to working with whichever candidate emerges as the winner at the end of this process.” In a text to Meadows, Lee reaffirms his support for Trump and mentions a meeting with other Republican senators at which Sidney Powell was the guest speaker. He writes, “You have in us a group of ready and loyal advocates who will go to bat for him, but I fear this could prove short-lived unless you hire the right legal team and set them loose immediately.” In a different message, Lee says he’s found Powell to be a “straight shooter.”

  • Nov. 10, 2020: Lee asks Meadows about how many “vbm” (likely referring to vote-by-mail ballots) were tossed out in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin for not meeting state requirements. “I can’t find the stats anywhere,” he wrote. “But in the primaries it was above the current margin of victory with much lower turnout. If they played games with that Trump has a really strong case.”

  • Nov. 19, 2020: Lee texts Meadows worried about Powell’s remarks at a news conference hosted by Trump’s legal team. In one text, he calls some of the accusations Powell made “very, very serious.” He also gives counsel to Meadows, writing, “Unless Powell can immediately substantiate what she said today, the president should probably disassociate himself and refute any claims that can’t be substantiated.”

  • Nov. 20 and 22, 2020: Lee sends texts asking for advice on what to say. “Please give me something to work with,” he writes on Nov. 20. “I just need to know what I should be saying.”

  • Nov. 23, 2020: Lee repeatedly defends Trump’s refusal to concede the election on conservative social network platform Parler, writing in one post, “You want unity now, progressives? Great. If you do, then — regardless of what you think of President Trump or the legal theories being pursued by his lawyers — at least acknowledge that he has every right to verify the fairness and accuracy of the election. Such efforts are not at odds with the electoral process; they are themselves part of the process.” Lee also sends a text to Meadows, outlining his belief that an audit of ballots in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia and Michigan could help prove “something is not right” in those states. “But to do this,” he wrote, “you’d have to act very soon.”

  • Dec. 8, 2020: Lee sends another suggestion to Meadows: “If a very small handful of states were to have their legislatures appoint alternative slates of delegates, there could be a path,” he writes, proving he knew about machinations to have then-Vice President Mike Pence discard Electoral College votes nearly a month before he claimed. Meadows responds, “I am working on that as of yesterday”

  • Dec. 16, 2020: Lee tells Meadows that if he wants any senators to object to certifying electoral votes, he would have to provide them with talking points. “I think we’re now passed the point where we can expect anyone will do it without some direction and a strong evidentiary argument,” he wrote in one text.

  • Jan. 3, 2021: Lee sends a slew of texts to Meadows, voicing concerns about the way the campaign is going. One of the texts reads, in part, “I’d love to be proven wrong about my concerns. But I really think this could all backfire badly unless we have legislatures submitting trump slates (based on a conclusion that this was the proper result under state law). … We simply have no authority to reject a state’s certified electoral votes in the absence of a dueling slates, with the Trump slate coming from a state legislative determination.”

  • Jan. 4, 2021: This is the final day of texts that CNN released between Lee and Meadows. Lee is upset at the way Trump rebuked him at a Georgia rally. Lee writes, “I’ve been calling state legislators for hours today, and am going to spend hours doing the same tomorrow. I’m trying to figure out a path that I can persuasively defend, and this won’t make it any easier, especially if others now think I’m doing this because he went after me. This just makes it a lot more complicated. And it was complicated already. We need something from state legislatures to make this legitimate and to have any hope of winning.”

  • Jan. 6, 2021: A mob storms the U.S. Capitol. During the assault, Trump mistakenly calls Lee. Lee votes against objections to certifying the election in Arizona and Pennsylvania. “Our job is a very simple one,” he said. “Our job is to convene to open the ballots and to count them. That’s it.”

  • March 10, 2021: Lee attacks HR1, a massive voting rights bill, saying, “I disagree with every single word in HR1 … Everything about this bill is rotten to the core. It was written and held by the devil himself.”

  • April 1, 2022: Trump endorses Lee for reelection.

  • Tribune editor Jeff Parrott and reporter Bryan Schott contributed to this report.

    Editor’s note • This story is available to Salt Lake Tribune subscribers only. Thank you for supporting local journalism.

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    ASI Election events back in person after 2-year virtual setting – The Poly Post

    ASI Election events back in person after 2-year virtual setting - The Poly Post

    By Connie Lee, Apr. 12, 2022

    After two years of a virtual election setting, ASI held multiple in-person events showcasing candidates and encouraging students to vote in the 2022 ASI Elections, which are taking place throughout this week.

    During Cal Poly Pomona’s remote instruction, candidates running for elected ASI officers were unable to attend in-person events to advocate for their plans. This semester, however, candidates were able to speak about their plans at the candidate meet and greet, college senator and senator-at-large town hall, and the president and vice president open forum from April 5 to April 7.

    Election turnout numbers also suffered during online instruction as students were removed from campaigning and less interested in student government. Less than 25% of the student population at CPP votes in elections every year, according to ASI Elections Chair Victoria Flores.

    “We have candidates post their posters around campus. On their posters, they have what they are planning to do for the student community,” said Flores. “In-person (campaigning) definitely helps out way more and we really try to incentivize our students and persuade them to vote so we can have really good numbers.”

    Students and candidates gather at the Union Plaza in the return of in-person election events. (Sam Padilla | The Poly Post)

    Two duos are running for president and vice president: Aliza Ortega and Daniel Foncello on one ticket, and Raaghav Wadhawan and Samy Ousman on the other.

    Ortega, a communication student, and Foncello, an economics student, chose to run for office together after serving in ASI this past year.

    “I serve as the CLASS senator and Aliza is our ASI officer of internal affairs, and we became pretty good friends over this past year so we decided that we can make some positive changes in the school together,” said Foncello.

    Their goals include representation for students of color, first-generation students, DREAMer students, student parents, transfer students and Greek life funding. Their objective for a sustainable campus involves alternative energy sources, lowering water usage and educating the importance of sustainability. Ortega and Foncello’s civic engagement with the campus include educating on resources that are available and allocating for more resources for students.

    “I think that it’s important to have a good balance because that shows your leadership; it would be hard to manage all the different things, and yes, you might want to pull back for your own mental health, but it’d be nice to participate in all the clubs,” said Ortega. “I still plan on trying to be active in the sorority that I’m in and I want to be as active as I am in the ASI events that we have like Voter Registration Day or Transfer Engagement Week.”

    Ortega stated that the running mates want to encourage students to participate and vote regardless of who they vote for. Ortega and Foncello want students to be active on campus.

    Wadhawan and Ousman’s visions for ASI consists of sustainable programs, financial opportunities and campus involvement. They are dedicated to creating an involved and beneficial campus community with additional programs to focus on sustainability, mental health and finances to create an exciting campus for the CPP community.

    “We have been doing a lot of word of mouth, going around campus and talking to people and our friends,” said Wadhawan, a computer engineering student. “Right now, it’s been word of mouth, but we have scheduled meetings to attend different organization meetings such as a couple of fraternities and sororities and clubs as well. So that’s another way that we are trying to get our message across by talking about our goals and programs we want to implement.”

    In addition to the race for president and vice president, students will also vote for senators to represent the campus’ colleges and student councils. However, the majority of the senatorial positions have only a single candidate running.

    Esperanza Lopez for the College of Agriculture, Guillermo Nila for the College of Engineering, Ilke Suzer for the College of Environmental Design, Alham Garcia for the College of Science, Naman Pandadiya for the College of Business, Natalie Padilla for Greek Council, Ryan Beacham for Multi-Cultural Council and Jacob Reyes for Student-Interest Council are all running unopposed.

    Only the CLASS senator position has more than one candidate. Andres Leonardo Mejia, Raneen Vace and Jacob Luna are running to represent the College of Letters, Arts, and Social Sciences.

    Information on all the candidates can be found on the 2022 ASI Elections website. Online voting will start on Monday, April 11 at 7 a.m. and end on Thursday, April 14 at 7 a.m. via myBAR.

    Feature image by Nicolas Hernandez

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    Ahead Of Election Day, Rodriguez-Gibbard Ticket To Host UPUA Campaign Events

    Ahead Of Election Day, Rodriguez-Gibbard Ticket To Host UPUA Campaign Events

    Najee Rodriguez and Sydney Gibbard launched their University Park Undergraduate Association campaign in February. Now, running unopposed, the two will host events leading up to Election Day on March 31.

    Rodriguez and Gibbard are running for UPUA president and vice president, respectively. Their campaign, “Climbing Higher, Together,” focuses on equity, empathy, and empowerment for the Penn State community.

    Here’s a quick look at some of the upcoming events, which aim to inform students on Rodriguez and Gibbard’s platform and initiatives.

    Meet The Candidates — 7 p.m. on March 24 in Freeman Auditorium

    This town hall aims to encourage student engagement and participation to learn more about Rodriguez and Gibbard’s platform and the policies their campaign focuses on.

    Rodriguez noted that he hopes this town hall will be a way for students to make an “informed and educated vote” come Election Day.

    Start With Saxby’s — 11 a.m. on March 28

    Both Rodriguez and Gibbard will engage with students over coffee in the courtyard outside Saxby’s. Gibbard and Rodriguez hope to meet students, share conversations, and create a welcoming environment for anyone to connect with their student government.

    ‘Meet the Candidates’ Livestream — 8 p.m. on March 30

    Students are invited to attend this livestream event to learn more about the election and who they can vote for the following morning.

    UPUA’s elections will be open from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. on March 31.

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    Mackenna is a sophomore food science major from Manitou Springs, Colorado and is one of Onward State’s associate editors. She loves food, is addicted to coffee, and can give you random facts or bad jokes that you didn’t ask for. Ask her to bake gluten-free goodies so she has an excuse to try out new cupcake flavors. Mackenna can be contacted via Twitter @mackennayount (especially if you want to show off your best dad jokes) or you can shoot her an email at [email protected]

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    United Power to host 4 events as board of directors election nears

    United Power to host 4 events as board of directors election nears

    United Power is hosting meet-the-candidate events this month for members to get to know the five people running for open positions on the board of directors.

    The following members-only events are free and don’t require an RSVP:

    • 7:30 a.m. Tuesday, March 22 at the Coal Creek Canyon Community Center in Golden;
    • 6:30 p.m. Monday, March 28 at Riverdale Regional Park & Fairgrounds, Rendezvous Room in Brighton;
    • 7:30 a.m. Wednesday, March 30 at the Fort Lupton Recreation Center;
    • 6:30 p.m. Thursday, March 31 at United Power Carbon Valley Service Center in Longmont.

    Candidates include Steven “Steve” Douglas, Naptali A. Lucks and Elizabeth “Beth” A. Martin in the East District; Keith Alquist in the South District; and Ursula J. Morgan in the West District, according to the cooperative’s news release.

    Candidates running for directors are elected on an “at-large” basis and represent all members.

    Members will receive a ballot in March, through the mail or electronically through their online accounts. All ballots must be received by April 12.

    On April 13, those interested can attend the hybrid 2022 Annual Meeting online on United Power’s website or in person at the Riverdale Regional Park & Fairgrounds to learn the results of the election, according to the release.

    Registration opens at 4:30 p.m., and balloting closes at the beginning of the official business meeting at 6:30 p.m.

    To view the director profiles that will be published in the cooperative’s March-April newsletter go to www.unitedpower.com/annual-meeting.