Bont2Bruce
Ready to rumble
- Mar 15, 2012
- 11,239
- 26,281
- AFL Club
- Western Bulldogs
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- Footscray, Melbourne City
An election can still be considered "democratic" if eligible voters are given the chance to vote and their votes are all counted. But my definition of undemocratic isn't just based on whether all eligible voters had the chance to vote and whether all the votes have been counted. I include other elements of fairness as equally important and if these are not present then I consider the election to be undemocratic. These other elements include giving candidates an equal platform to contest the election and equal rights to present themselves to the voters. These elements are missing from the Club's approach to bresker in this current board election process and for this reason I consider this election to be undemocratic, even though I expect all eligible voters to be given the chance to vote and all the votes to be accurately counted.If unsuitable or lesser qualified candidates were being undemocratically elected to the board over more qualified or better suited candidates, you might have a point. However, I've not seen any evidence that a more worthy candidate has been shut out of an election simply to maintain the status quo. Can you provide an example?
Do you agree or disagree with the following statement:
The chances of bresker being successfully elected as candidate who was not "endorsed" by the incumbent board have been further reduced by the following actions taken by club officials:
(i) putting bresker last on the slate
(ii) giving him 24 hours to prepare a submission
(ii) removing over 50% of the content of his submission
(iv) not giving bresker the option of editing his own submission to be "in line" with the preferred format of the current administration, once they found it to be significantly outside the format they were wanting
I agree that several of the removed sections of bresker's biography were not appropriate for the submission required. But I consider that some relevant information was removed which is why I maintain that he has been censored. bresker should in my opinion have been given the opportunity to resubmit a biography because (i) he was only given 24 hours to prepare it in the first place and (ii) the Club's officials deemed that more than 50% of it needed to be struck out. This unfortunately does not appear to have been the case.Bresker was only "censored" insofar as he tried to wedge several irrelevant paragraphs into a professional biography. Having insufficient relevant experience to fill out a one-page professional biography doesn't mean you can use the rest of the page to evangelise about your agenda. Read the professional biographies for Matthew Croft and Chris Nolan, the two other candidates, and note that neither contains a spiel about their respective agendas.
As I posted earlier, the fact that bresker has been addicted to pokies is relevant personal information which is neither inappropriate nor irrelevant. Yet it was removed in an act of overzealous censorship by some unnamed Club official.
I don't have a problem with the CEO making a recommendation for bresker not to run. I consider this to be part of the CEO's job description to get the best overall financial outcome for the club as a whole, because as you mention to avoid the cost of an election which may be potentially avoidable through some open discussion with the "one-issue" candidate.I also support the club attempting to mitigate the adverse impact (time wastage, cost, adverse publicity, etc) of a nomination by a single-issue candidate who appears to be under-qualified for a position on the board, is only nominating in order to be able to make a speech at the AGM (see below quote) and plainly hasn't exhausted the other options available to him. "Under-qualified" isn't a personal dig - I consider myself under-qualified for a role on the club's board.
Possibly true, but this is speculation and we have no details to confirm or deny this.The CEO of the club contacting Bresker directly indicates that it's likely Bresker would have been able to open up a dialogue with the club to ascertain its stance and (short/medium/long term) intentions with respect to poker machines, and put forth his views, well prior to taking the extraordinary step of nominating for election to the board.
I wholeheartedly agree with your first two points, but strongly disagree with your last point for the reasons I have outlined above. I haven't heard the club's side of this but what I have heard from bresker only suggests that he has not been treated fairly by the Club's officials in the way in which his biographical submission was edited and presented to the members. I can find no other suitable word to describe this process than censorship, which I consider to be unfair and this therefore taints my view of the fairness of the entire election process.In short:
- I respect Bresker's passion to effect change on an issue that is important to him, and support him taking steps to do so;
- However, I think he's been rash and cursory in his approach, in a fashion that may be detrimental to both the club and his cause; and
- the club's response to Bresker has been proper, and doesn't warrant criticism.
It would not have been particularly difficult for the incumbent board and the officials who work directly for them to have acted in a more fair manner on this issue without decreasing the likelihood that the endorsed candidates would still ultimately be successful in the election.