Thursday, March 23, 2017

Rick Perry Is Challenging Texas A&M's Election Of Its First Gay Student Body President

The energy secretary accused Texas A&M student government of using shady election tactics in a “quest for ‘diversity.’”

In an op-ed published in the Houston Chronicle on Wednesday, Energy Secretary Rick Perry challenged the legitimacy of Texas A&M University's recent student government election, in which an openly gay student was elected president for the first time.

In an op-ed published in the Houston Chronicle on Wednesday, Energy Secretary Rick Perry challenged the legitimacy of Texas A&M University's recent student government election, in which an openly gay student was elected president for the first time.

The election was already dramatic even before Perry waded in, with frontrunner Robert McIntosh getting disqualified from the race following accusations of voter intimidation and campaign spending violations.

McIntosh was later cleared of the voter intimidation charges, though the spending charge (for failing to provide receipts for glow sticks that appeared in a campaign video) was upheld. He was removed from the race and Bobby Brooks, McIntosh's opponent in the race, was elected president.

Perry, a Texas A&M alumnus, wrote that when he first heard the newest student body president was a gay man, he was "proud of our students because the election appeared to demonstrate a commitment to treating every student equally, judging on character rather than on personal characteristics."

However, once he learned of McIntosh's disqualification that led to Brooks' win, he believed "the SGA allowed an election to be stolen outright" through a process that "made a mockery of due process and transparency."

Mike Stone / Getty Images

It is difficult to escape the perception that this quest for "diversity" is the real reason the election outcome was overturned. Does the principle of "diversity" override and supersede all other values of our Aggie Honor Code?

Every Aggie ought to ask themselves: How would they act and feel if the victim was different? What if McIntosh had been a minority student instead of a white male? What if Brooks had been the candidate disqualified? Would the administration and the student body have allowed the first gay student body president to be voided for using charity glow sticks? Would the student body have allowed a black student body president to be disqualified on anonymous charges of voter intimidation?

We all know that the administration, the SGA and student body would not have permitted such a thing to happen. The outcome would have been different if the victim was different.

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from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2nbO7rQ

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