In a record-breaking election, the Singh ticket won the student body presidency.
“Thank you so much,” Sunny Singh, the new 2025-26 student body president, said last Friday while accepting the nomination. “We cannot wait to change campus with you.”
Singh won the presidency alongside Olivia Saenz as vice president of university relations and Elle Williams as vice president of student relations. They earned 2,338 of the 6,168 total votes cast. This was the biggest voter turnout in an ASUU election.
Singh won the presidency ahead of the ABC ticket, which fell in second place, and the Rose ticket. He thanked the other tickets for their campaigning during his acceptance speech.
“We broke a record together. That’s not a small deal,” Singh said. “I really want to say you guys pushed me, pushed us, pushed everyone over here to be the best they can be.”
The Singh ticket ran on a campaign promising the reallocation of $600,000 of ASUU’s budget for student organizations and the creation of a ski shuttle to bring students directly from campus to ski areas.
“I don’t take this mandate lightly. I want you to know that as a student body president, I will be on the front lines with my amazing team right over here … to make a change on campus, to deliver on the things that we promised you,” Singh said.
Ethan Foley, student governance advisor for ASUU, also spoke before Friday’s announcement. He thanked all the candidates for their hard work this election and their passion and sense of community.
“You are all outstanding people, outstanding, wonderful, amazing, beautiful people and the passion that each of you show has given me hope,” he said.
The Singh ticket will be inaugurated at the end of the semester. Their term will start this summer and last until the spring 2026 semester.
Other Results
The election results for attorney general, ASUU Senate and ASUU Assembly were also announced Friday.
Katie Nelson, from the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, won the race for attorney general over Jacob Bastian. Nelson was endorsed by the Singh ticket and earned 3,524 of the 6,168 votes cast.
ASUU Senate
Each college at the U has one representative in the Senate. Here’s who will be representing the colleges in the upcoming academic year.
- College of Architecture and Planning: Jack O’Leary.
- David Eccles School of Business: Bryce Perkins.
- College of Dentistry: Eli Asay.
- College of Education: Ana Sanchez Benet.
- College of Engineering: Jace Boyd.
- College of Fine Arts: Karley Swallow.
- College of Health: Mayette Pahulu
- College of Humanities: Anna Locke.
- College of Law: Brooke Davies.
- School of Medicine: Scott King and Hailey Lawrence tied with 85 votes each. A runoff election will determine the winner.
- College of Nursing: Brooke Fernandez.
- College of Pharmacy: Kennon Buss.
- College of Science: Sofia Perez.
- College of Social and Behavioral Science: Maddy Hadwick.
- College of Social Work: Berkeley Wiseman.
- College of Cultural and Social Transformation: Juniper Nilsson.
The College of Undergraduate Studies did not have any students run, leaving its Senate seat vacant.
ASUU Assembly
There are a total of 36 seats in the Assembly, and representatives are given to each college based on the number of students enrolled. Here are the new assembly members.
- College of Architecture and Planning: Keila Torres Ayon.
- David Eccles School of Business: Gabby Renteria, Hanson Gu, Jack Harrison, Tea Driver and Mya Oetinger.
- College of Dentistry: Saib Abdulnoor.
- College of Education: Blythe Wilde.
- College of Engineering: Christina Dong, Jose Hernandez, Nikita Singhi, Erik Bond, Haley Feuerher and Raksha Prasad.
- College of Fine Arts: The College of Fine Arts only had one student run, leaving a second Assembly seat vacant. Juan Gomez won the other seat.
- College of Health: The College of Health only had one student run, leaving a second Assembly seat vacant. Kyra Chan won the other seat.
- College of Humanities: Bella Nibley and Reese Maranda Van Dyke.
- College of Law: Andrew Scrimsher.
- School of Medicine: Freddy Espinoza.
- College of Nursing: Gabby Murillo.
- College of Pharmacy: Sarah King.
- College of Science: Merrin Maughan, Navi Brar and Evelyn Newson.
- College of Social and Behavioral Science: Raquel Juarez, Rayshon “Ray” Baker, Mikayla Fairchild and Riley Clark.
- College of Social Work: The College of Social Work did not have any students run, leaving its one assembly seat vacant.
- College of Cultural and Social Transformation: Sadie Werner.
- College of Undergraduate Studies: Annie Knight.