Abbreviation | ASUC |
---|---|
Formation | March 2nd, 1887 |
Type | Student association |
Legal status | 501(c)(3) organization |
Headquarters | 412 Eshleman Hall, Berkeley, California[1] |
Location | |
President | Sydney Roberts |
Student Advocate | Ariana Kretz |
External Affairs Vice President | Alexander Edgar |
Academic Affairs Vice President | Kenneth Ng |
Key people | Mickael Candelaria, Justin Gomez, Henry F. Isselbacher, Carol Christ, Catherine Bauer Gabrielle Sharp, Osiris Polachart, Joshua Lee, Alfonzo Marquez. |
Affiliations | University of California Student Association[2] |
Budget | $1,678,558 [3] |
Website | asuc |
The Associated Students of the University of California (ASUC) is the autonomous and officially recognized students' association of the University of California, Berkeley. It is the only students' association within the University of California that is fully autonomous from the university administration. Founded in 1887,[4] the ASUC is an independent, 501(c)(3)[5] non-profit, and unincorporated association. The ASUC controls funding for all ASUC-sponsored organizations, advocates on behalf of students to solve issues on campus and in the community, engages with administrators to develop programming, increase student-organizational resources, and increase transparency.
History
The ASUC was founded on March 2, 1887. Prior to this, Berkeley had no residence halls, sport teams, or permanent student organizations. The original purpose of the ASUC was "to organize the Student Body in such wise that it might take effective action upon all matter relating to the general welfare of the student body and the University in general."[6] The organization went on to absorb the Cal Student Store, become the center of student organization oversight, and run all university athletics until the 1960s.[7]
Various student political parties – popularly known as "slates" – and independent student communities participate in the ASUC. SLATE, a pioneer organization of the New Left and precursor of the Free Speech Movement and formative counterculture era, was a campus political party at Cal from 1958 to 1966, while VOICE (a radical party) and Pact (a liberal party) were campus political parties at Cal in 1967.[8]
As of 2022, two parties primarily dominated ASUC politics. Student Action, founded in 1995, is a coalition of organizations, with key support groups being the Greek life and pre-law community.[9] ElevateCal, founded in 2021, counts the inclusion of marginalized communities and transparency within student government as some of its main principles. ElevateCal also refers to itself as a coalition because it was founded by members of the office of then-Senator Chaka Tellem in the shadow of the REBUILD Coalition which had dissolved prior to the 2020 election[10] and which was in turn formed by members of CalSERVE which dissolved after the 2019 election.[11] CalSERVE (Cal Students for Equal Rights and a Valid Education), founded 1984, was also a coalition, but one centered directly on "access, representation, and social, environmental, and racial justice."[12]
The history of ASUC political parties includes large and small parties advocating for a multitude of interests. SQUELCH! is a satirical party which has run and won seats in the past before suffering a major blow in the 2017 elections, when they won no seats in the senate.[13] The Pirate Party centers their messaging on technology and humor, campaigning in pirate costumes during election season. As of the 2017 elections, they held one seat in the ASUC Senate.[14] The Defend Affirmative Action Party (DAAP), founded by national activist and left-wing militant group BAMN, campaigns on a platform of radical racial justice and inclusion for students, though has found relatively little support, having won no seats for 9 years as of 2017.[15] BAMN itself began at Berkeley in 1995 and ran candidates starting in 1996 under its own name, which, at the time, was The Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action By Any Means Necessary.[16] The major parties from the late 1980s and early 1990s included: the Bears Party, drawing from a similar constituency as today's Student Action; Students for Progress, a center-left party; as well as Cal-SERVE. Minor Parties that won seats during that era included: More centrist groups like GRASP (Grass Root and Student Power), APPLE (A People's Party for Loyalty and Experience), Vision,[17] SEED, a progressive party to the left of Cal-SERVE; Crusaders for the Rights of Undeclared and Confused Students (CRUCS), focused on initiatives to improve student life such as extending the P/NP and drop deadlines beyond the first round of midterms; the Monster Truck Party, appealing to Greek constituencies with the slogan: "what will knowledge of other cultures do if your car throws a rod 10 miles outside of Kettleman City"; the PENIS Party, with the slogan "erect a leader," and a platform advocating for more urinals and a taller Campanile; and the Science and Engineering Party, which advocated for the interests of science and engineering students and who partnered with CRUCS to win 4 executive seats between 1990 and 1992.
Programs and resources
The ASUC's responsibilities include allocating student group funding through a yearly spring budgeting process. The finance officer evaluates each club's funding request, length of time as a sponsored organization, and history of funding in order to determine how much money each registered student organization should be allocated. The ASUC budgets in excess of $1 million each year to campus organizations, including the Bridges multicultural resource & retention center.[18]
The offices of the president and the external affairs vice president focus much of their time on student advocacy, often relating to issues of sexual assault, campus safety, student voice, mental health, equality, and diversity.[18]
Governance
The ASUC Constitution establishes a students' association with elected officials modeled after California's separation-of-powers and plural elected executive framework.[19]
The executive officers and the Senate of the ASUC are popularly elected by single transferable vote.[19] Chief Appointed Officers are non-partisan officials appointed by the Senate. The six Chief Appointed Officials are the Chief Communications Officer (CCO), Chief Financial Officer (CFO), Chief Legal Officer (CLO), Chief Technology Officer (CTO), Chief Personnel Officer (CPO), and Chief Grants & Scholarships Officer (CGO).[20]
The five elected executive officers of the ASUC are the President, Executive Vice President (EVP), External Affairs Vice President (EAVP), Academic Affairs Vice President (AAVP), and the Student Advocate.[19] Political parties that compete in ASUC elections usually run candidates for the first four positions, while the fifth, student advocate, is traditionally won in a nonpartisan race by a member of the staff of the outgoing student advocate.[18]
In 2019, the student body passed the Transfer Remedy Act ballot proposition, which added the Transfer Student Representative as a unique ASUC office intended to represent the campus' growing transfer student population.[21] The Transfer Student Representative is a voting ex-officio member of the ASUC Senate, serving as the de facto twenty-first member of the Senate and maintaining all of the responsibilities of a regular ASUC Senator. The Transfer Student Representative is chosen a separate election using the single transferable vote mechanism.[21] The position was on the ASUC election ballot for the first time in the spring 2020 election.[22]
Notable alumni
- Jesse Gabriel, member of the California State Assembly from the 45th district.
- Christopher Cabaldon, Mayor of West Sacramento, California.
- Jesse Arreguín, 22nd Mayor of Berkeley.
- Josh Fryday, former Mayor of Novato, California and Chief Service Officer, State of California.
- Nick Pacheco, member of the Los Angeles City Council from the 14th district (1999-2003).
- José Huizar, member of the Los Angeles City Council from the 14th district (2005-2020).
- Rigel Robinson, member of the Berkeley, California City Council.
- Pedro Noguera, Dean, USC Rossier School of Education.
- Wally Adeyemo, Deputy Secretary of the Treasury; inaugural president of the Obama Foundation.
- Leigh Steinberg, American sports agent.
- Ki Hong Lee, American actor.
- John Cho, Korean American Actor.
List of executive & appointed officers
Years | President | Executive Vice President | External Affairs Vice President | Academic Affairs Vice President | Student Advocate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1985-1986[23] | Pedro Noguera | Karen Licavoli | Linda Asato | M. Bruce Robinson | Steven Ganz |
1986-1987 | Steven Ganz | Nicole Maguire | Christopher Cabaldon | Tom Malinowski | Matt Denn |
1987-1988 | Michael I. Berry | Julie Chang | Beth Bernstein | ||
1988-1989 | Jeff Chang | Pamela Brown | Pete Kennedy | ||
1989-1990 | Tisa Poe | Pamela Brown | Jose Huizar | Jan Young | Bonaparte Liu |
1990-1991 | Bonaparte Liu | Shahed Amanullah | Bess Dolmo | Ben Austin | |
1991-1992 | Mark Yablonovich | Cecelia Wang | Rachel Settlage | ||
1992-1993 | Margaret Fortune | Mimi Aye | Tim Yeung | Greg Lewis | Lisa (Swartout) Zwicker |
1993-1994[24] | Marco Pulisci | Scott Kamena | Anny Huang | Mike Young | Andrew Wong |
1994-1995 | Andrew Wong | Alex Weingarten | Victor Martinez | Joanne Loh | Auren Hoffman |
1995-1996 | Jeff Cohen | Felicia Sze | Esa Yu | Eric Higashiguchi | Mark Schlosberg |
1996-1997 | Grant Harris | Sharon Yuan | Renee Dall | Christina Pak | Aaron Butler |
1997-1998 | Sharon Yuan | Lee Fink | Sanjeev Bery | Margie Brown | Hikari Kimura |
1998-1999 | Irami Osei Frimpong (resigned)
Preston Taylor |
Rishi Chandna | Shin Honma | Amanda Canning | Randolph Gaw |
1999-2000 | Patrick Campbell | Conor Moore | Gray Chynoweth | Ally McNally | Jen Shen |
2000-2001[25] | Teddy Liaw | Alex Ding | Nick Papas | Jen Chang (resigned November 2000)[26]
Jose Luis Lopez (appointed December 2000) |
Kevin Hammon |
2001-2002[27] | Wally Adeyemo[28] | Justin Christensen | Josh Fryday | Catherine Ahn | Alex Kipnis[29] |
2002-2003[30] | Jesse Gabriel | Han Hong | Jimmy Bryant | Tony Falcone | Salam Rafeedie |
2003-2004[31] | Kris Cuaresma-Primm | Taina Gomez | Anu Joshi | Gustavo Mata | Dave Madan[32][33] |
2004-2005[34] | Misha Leybovich | Christine Lee | Liz Hall | Rocky Gade | Dave Madan |
2005-2006 | Manuel Buenrostro | Anil Daryani | Sharon Han | Jason Dixson | Vikrum Aiyer |
2006-2007 | Oren Gabriel | Vishal Kumar Gupta | Jason Chu | Joyce Liou | |
2007-2008 | Van Nguyen | Taylor Allbright | Danny Montes | Curtis Lee | |
2008-2009 | Roxanne Winston | Krystle Pasco | Dionne JIrachaikitti | Carlo De La Cruz | Matthew David Demartini |
2009-2010 | Will Smelko | Tu Tran | Dani Haber | John Tran | |
2010-2011 | Noah Stern | Nanxi Liu | Ricardo Gomez | Viola Tang | |
2011-2012 | Vishalli Loomba | Chris Alabastro | Joey Freeman | Julia Joung | Samar Shah |
2012-2013[35] | Connor Landgraf | Justin Sayarath | Shahryar Abbasi | Natalie Gavello | Stacy Suh |
2013-2014[36] | Deejay Pepito | Nolan Pack | Safeena Mecklai | Valerie Jameson | Timofey Semenov |
2014-2015[37] | Pavan Upadhyayula | Justin Kong | Caitlin Quinn | Summer (elected): Jeanette Corona
Fall (acting): Pavan Upadhyayula[38] Fall-Spring (appointed): Mon-Shane Chou[39] |
Rishi Ahuja |
2015-2016[40] | Yordanos Dejen | Lavanya Jawaharlal | Marium Navid | Melissa Hsu | Leah Romm |
2016-2017[41] | William Morrow | Alicia Lau | Andre Luu | Frances McGinley | Selina Lao |
2017-2018[42] | Zaynab Abdulqadir-Morris | Helen Yuan | Rigel Robinson | Andrew-Ian Bullitt | Jillian Free |
2018-2019[43] | Alexander Wilfert | Hung Huynh | Nuha Khalfay | Melany Amarikwa | Sophie Bandarkar |
2019-2020[44] | Amma Sarkodee-Adoo | Andy Theocharous (resigned in April 2020) [45]
Nathan Mizell (appointed in April 2020) [46] |
Varsha Sarveshwar | Aastha Jha | Nava Bearson |
2020-2021[22] | Victoria Vera | Melvin Tangonan | Derek Imai | Nicole Anyanwu | Joyce Huchin |
2021-2022[47] | Chaka Tellem | Aditya Dev Varma (resigned in August 2021)
Antonio Kobe Lopez (acting) Giancarlo Fernandez (appointed in September 2021) |
Riya Master | James Weichert | Era Goel |
2022-2023[48] | Chaka Tellem | Giancarlo Fernandez | Bailey Henderson | James Weichert | Crystal Choi |
2023-2024[49] | Sydney Roberts | Shrinidi Gopal | Alexander Edgar | Kenneth Ng | Ariana Kretz |
Years | Chief Communications Officer | Chief Financial Officer | Chief Legal Officer | Chief Personel Officer | Chief Technology Officer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020-2021 | Annie Pan | David Wang | Althalia Djuhana | David Zhou | Grace Luo |
2021-2022 2 | Nancy Kim | Henry F. Isselbacher | Mina Han | David
Zhou / Eliana Kim |
Oscar Bjorkman |
2022-2023 | Ryan Barba / Jennifer Rojas | Henry F. Isselbacher | Jason Dones | Eliana Kim / Michael Moy | Saruul Amarbayar |
2023-2024 | Jennifer Rojas | Catherine Park | Jason Dones | Michael Moy | Vedha Santhosh |
See also
References
- ↑ "ASUC | Home". Associated Students of the University of California. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
- ↑ "Student Board - University of California Student Association". University of California Student Association. 2019. Retrieved February 8, 2019.
- ↑ "ASUC FY23 General Budget [FINAL ABSA ALLOCATIONS]". Retrieved 2022-05-08.
- ↑ Johnson, Robert S. (1966). "Berkeley: Student Government". University of California History. Retrieved 2015-12-01.
- ↑ ASUC Form 990 for the 2008-2009 tax year
- ↑ ASUC Constitution of 1887
- ↑ "ASUC". asuc.org. Retrieved 2017-12-18.
- ↑ Glusman, Paul (October 6–12, 1967). "Anti-Plaque Claque Wins". Berkeley Barb. p. 14. Retrieved 2017-01-29.
Voting in the affirmative were [Norm] Pederson, Steve Greenberg, Herb Englehardt (all of VOICE, the radical party), and Martinas Ycas, an anarchist. Voting against were the conservative senators, and Pete Ross, Charlie Palmer, and Bill Bennet of Pact, the liberal party.
- ↑ "Student Action - Every Student, Every Year". studentaction.org. Retrieved 2017-12-18.
- ↑ Finman, Kate (April 5, 2020). "All REBUILD candidates publicly drop party". The Daily Californian.
- ↑ Jeong, Audry (March 29, 2020). "4 official parties to run candidates in ASUC 2020 election cycle". The Daily Californian.
- ↑ "CalSERVE". calserve.org. Archived from the original on 2017-12-16. Retrieved 2017-12-18.
- ↑ Fineman, Jake (May 1, 2017). "SQUELCH! is dead, long live SQUELCH!". The Daily Californian.
- ↑ Lynn, Jessica (March 17, 2017). "Pirate Party announces 3 ASUC Senate candidates". The Daily Californian.
- ↑ Provencio, Elaina (March 17, 2015). "DAAP announces 4 ASUC general election candidates". The Daily Californian.
- ↑ Associated Students of the University of California Voter's Guide, 1996
- ↑ "CalSERVE partners with Cooperative Movement Party, gaining new political ground". The Daily Californian. 2014-03-14. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
- 1 2 3 "What is the ASUC?". Associated Students of the University of California. Retrieved 2016-03-17.
- 1 2 3 "ASUC Constitution". ASUC Central Drive (Google Drive).
- ↑ "Staff Directory | ASUC". ASUC. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
- 1 2 Katewa, Aditya (2020-04-01). "ASUC 2020 elections ballot introduces transfer student representative position". The Daily Californian. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
- 1 2 "ASUC Elections Council, Judicial Council certify election results for 2020-21 academic year". The Daily Californian. 2020-04-24. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
- ↑ Krueger, Chris (1985-04-16). "First black president in ASUC history". The Daily Californian. Vol. XVII, no. 67. Berkeley, California. pp. 1, 3. Retrieved 2022-03-17.
- ↑ "ASUC Elected Officials List 1930-1999". asuc.org/archives. Retrieved 2023-07-18.
- ↑ "Party Sweeps Top ASUC Seats - The Daily Californian". archive.dailycal.org. Retrieved 2018-04-05.
- ↑ "Error-Ridden Cal-FACTS Stir Demand For VP Recall - The Daily Californian". archive.dailycal.org. Retrieved 2018-04-05.
- ↑ "Elections Results Finally Released - The Daily Californian". archive.dailycal.org. Retrieved 2018-04-05.
- ↑ "Wally Adeyemo | Center for Strategic and International Studies". Archived from the original on 2017-07-06.
- ↑ Appointed after the elected candidate, Matt Holohan, stepped down shortly after his election.
- ↑ "Student Action Sweeps Executive Office Slate - The Daily Californian". archive.dailycal.org. Retrieved 2018-04-05.
- ↑ "Cal-SERVE Sweeps - The Daily Californian". archive.dailycal.org. Retrieved 2018-04-05.
- ↑ "Editorial: The Daily Californian Endorsements - The Daily Californian". archive.dailycal.org. Retrieved 2018-04-05.
- ↑ Took over the Student Advocate office following the disqualification of candidate Bryant Yang from the election; his only opponent, graduating senior Richard Schulman, received a majority of the votes but could not serve, according to ASUC rules.
- ↑ "Student Action Rises Again: Leybovich Nets ASUC Presidency - The Daily Californian". archive.dailycal.org. Retrieved 2018-04-05.
- ↑ Morris, J. D. (2012-04-19). "2012 ASUC general election results". The Daily Californian. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
- ↑ Mehra, Curan (2013-04-18). "ASUC Election 2013 results: CalSERVE takes 3 of 4 partisan executive seats". The Daily Californian. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
- ↑ Messerly, Megan (2014-04-17). "2014 ASUC general election results". The Daily Californian. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
- ↑ As ASUC President, Pavan Upadhyayula was the de jure acting AAVP under the ASUC Constitution during the vacancy. However, AAVP Chief-of-Staff Denim Ohmit was the de facto acting AAVP.
- ↑ "Mon-Shane Chou confirmed as academic affairs vice president | The Daily Californian". The Daily Californian. 2014-10-09. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
- ↑ Chinoy, Sahil; Weiner, Chloee (2015-04-16). "LIVE: Results from the 2015 ASUC general elections". The Daily Californian. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
- ↑ Abbott, Katy (2016-04-08). "LIVE: Results from the 2016 ASUC general elections". The Daily Californian. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
- ↑ Platten, Andrea (2017-04-14). "LIVE: Results from the 2017 ASUC general elections". The Daily Californian. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
- ↑ "LIVE: Results from the 2018 ASUC general elections". The Daily Californian. 2018-04-13. Retrieved 2018-05-10.
- ↑ "ASUC Executive Vice President Andy Theocharous resigns". The Daily Californian. 2019-04-14. Retrieved 2019-05-18.
- ↑ "LIVE: Results from the 2018 ASUC general elections". The Daily Californian. 2020-04-11. Retrieved 2018-05-10.
- ↑ "Nathan Mizell to serve as ASUC executive vice president through end of semester". The Daily Californian. 2020-04-23. Retrieved 2018-05-10.
- ↑ "LIVE: Results from the 2021 ASUC general elections". The Daily Californian. 2021-04-09. Retrieved 2021-05-30.
- ↑ "Independents hold slight majority in 2022-23 ASUC executive offices". The Daily Californian. 2022-04-08. Retrieved 2022-05-08.
- ↑ Katewa, Aditya (April 14, 2023). "LIVE: Results from the 2023 ASUC general elections". The Daily Californian.
External links
- Official ASUC website
- Student Advocate's Office website
- History of the Berkeley Student Government at the UC Berkeley Library's UC History Digital Archives
- CalSERVE website
- Student Action website
- Cooperative Movement Party on Facebook
- SDU website