The Stringham ticket won the ASUU student body presidency, with 1,538 votes of the total 4,411. The Stringham ticket consists of Erica Stringham as the presidential candidate, Jake Holmberg as the vice president of university relations and Niya West as the vice president of student relations.
Stringham won the presidency over the Hand ticket, who ended in second place with 1,456 votes, and the Sunshine ticket, with 1,345 votes.
Stringham response
On the win, Stringham said she was “excited to be the next student body president.” West described that the team had a good experience running. “We are so incredibly grateful for this opportunity, and for everyone that supported us along this journey,” she said.
“We’re going to continue to lead by listening and be the leadership that listens,” Stringham said. “We will stay committed to our plan with affordability, belonging, inclusion, safety, mental health and we’re going to continue to help ease the burdens for students every day.”
The Stringham ticket said they intend to begin immediately, meeting with students over the summer, expanding resource awareness through the Utah360 app and honing in on their pillars of affordability, mental health and safety.
The ticket described how they were committed to leading with transparency, collaboration and accountability. “This role is about service, and we are ready to serve the entire student body,” Stringham said.
Josie Renick, the elections director for ASUU, said she is proud of what ASUU did this year for elections. “My whole goal was to have a fair election … and for it to be fun,” Renick said. She encouraged students to stay involved with ASUU and hold the presidencies accountable.
ASUU Attorney General results
Lilianna Borecki won the attorney general position for the upcoming academic year, receiving 2594 votes.
ASUU Senate results
Each college has one representative in the ASUU Senate. Listed below are the representatives for the upcoming academic year, along with the amount of votes each candidate received.
- College of Architecture and Planning – Jack O’Leary (84)
- David Eccles School of Business – Jonathan Chan (271)
- College of Dentistry – Josh Nielsen (9)
- College of Education – Elia Johnson (47)
- College of Engineering – Samantha Watrin (330)
- College of Fine Arts – Giovanni Nuvan (93)
- College of Health – Mayette Pahulu (260)
- College of Humanities – Olivia Campagna (194)
- College of Law – Drake Mailes (13)
- School of Medicine – Scott Orton (40)
- College of Nursing – Jordan Cai (229)
- College of Pharmacy – Yongmin Chen (29)
- College of Science – Sofia Perez (317)
- College of Social and Behavioral Science – Sumer Tariq (250)
- College of Social Work – Berkeley Wiseman (45)
- College of Undergraduate Studies – Erik Knecht (83)
ASUU Assembly results
There are a total of 36 seats in the ASUU Assembly. The number of representatives are allocated to each college based on the number of students enrolled. Below are the assembly representatives for the upcoming academic year.
- College of Architecture and Planning – Olive Yoo (82)
- David Eccles School of Business – Ava Zhao (413), Kyla Cox (407), Hannah Strassberg (393), Tate Miller (377), Hudson MacDonald (376)
- College of Dentistry – Mackenzie Pianovski (8)
- College of Education – Grace Givens (76)
- College of Engineering- Allison Cutting (354), Eryn Shea (270), Will Fennell (259), Charlie Weyerhaeuser (249), John Rodriguez (242)
- College of Fine Arts – Ellie Lyman (152), Maggie Maierle (136)
- College of Health – Abby Topham (174), Kyra Chan (173)
- College of Humanities – Kendall Harward (255), James VanLooy (181)
- College of Law – Kate Olsen (24)
- School of Medicine – Freddy Espinoza (77)
- College of Nursing – Emma Ampudia (70)
- College of Pharmacy – Ingrid Vanderzon (55)
- College of Science – Lily Berhan (376), Aaboli Samant (321), Khai-hy Ngo (316)
- College of Social and Behavioral Science – Sadie Akin (283), Jolie Nguyen (276), Raquel Juarez (238), Suvam Pokharel (200)
- College of Social Work – Alex Bienkowski (35)
No students ran for the College of Undergraduate Studies, so the college will not have an assembly representative.
ASUU JB-18
Along with the elections, ASUU let students vote on Joint Bill 18 — a bill that would reshape the election process through rank choice voting — and was passed by students.
