Word: voting
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...unprecedented reversal following allegations of fraud and vote-tampering, the Undergraduate Council Election Commission decided to “de-certify” the results of the presidential election released today, pending further notice...
Election Commission Chair Brad A. Seiler ’10 announced his resignation concurrently with the release of the vote totals in the election, in an e-mail sent to the Undergraduate Council general e-mail list at 10:51 p.m. tonight...
...around the yard to promote the show. At the Science Center, they will be playing the entries of the “10,000 Men of Harvard Re-Mix Challenge.” Hopefully Perhaps even drowning out the UC candidates’ vote mongering...
...know it on the streets of Paris, Athens or Helsinki. Europeans are by and large apathetic about the idea of having an E.U. President, in part, perhaps, because they aren't having a say in choosing who it is. Rather than open the contest up to a Europe-wide vote, E.U. leaders are instead making the decision behind closed doors amid a swirl of rumors, gossip and intrigue more befitting a papal conclave than the selection of the head of the largest group of democracies in the world. (See pictures of Paris expanding...
...President will have a term of 2½ years. If the person selected by E.U. leaders on Thursday wants to run again, there will undoubtedly be pressure for him or her to present a platform of ideas. The new E.U. Foreign Minister must be approved by a vote of the European Parliament, and members may also take that opportunity to grill the candidate on his or her foreign policy agenda. (Read "A Treaty Ratified, the E.U. Turns to Picking Its Leader...