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Raghuveer-Zhu Seek UC Relevance

DEMANDING RELEVANCE

Raghuveer says that she and Zhu spent a full five weeks debating ideas before they settled on their final campaign platform: making the UC more relevant to students’ lives.

The duo points to last year’s UC presidential election—which saw a voter turnout of just over 40 percent—as indicative of student apathy toward the UC.

Raghuveer and Zhu say that their slogan, “Demand Relevance,” reflects their desire to find ways to make the UC matter in the Harvard community.

“We use the word ‘relevance’ instead of ‘action’ because we can’t act as a body without being relevant here,” Raghuveer says.

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As part of their proposed reforms, they plan to combat what they describe as a culture of speculation on the UC, in which representatives have little actual knowledge of student concerns.

To this extent, they have proposed a new initiative called “Harvard Thinks, Harvard Changes,” which would add referendum questions to the start-of-semester registration tool and the end-of-semester Q Guide to give students a forum to voice their suggestions.

Campaign supporters say that the ticket’s emphasis on relevance is a winning platform.

Kemie U. Iko ’14, Raghuveer’s blockmate, says that she had little interest in the UC before Raghuveer and Zhu began their campaign.

“Not only do they have big picture ideals, but they also give concrete examples of how the UC can make a change, which is important for me as someone not very invested in the UC,” Iko says.

LADIES WHO RULE

In recent years, the UC has sought to rectify a gender imbalance that in 2010 saw women make up less than a quarter of all UC members.

Following this fall’s election, 42 percent of UC representatives are female.

Despite this progress, Raghuveer and Zhu represent the first all-female presidential ticket in four years—a distinction that Raghuveer recently noted by publishing a Spotify playlist titled “ladies who rule” in honor of the campaign.

The duo says they have the experience to continue making the UC a more welcoming place for women.

Zhu, who was the only female UC representative from her freshman class, led information sessions and campaign workshops for aspiring UC representatives this fall to encourage greater gender equality on the Council.

“There is still so much work to do in that department and we want to be leading that change,” Zhu says.

But though Raghuveer is proud of her all-female ticket, she says she does not want students to vote for her and Zhu simply because they are women.

“We want people to vote for us because we have the best ideas, we are the best ticket, and we happen to be females,” Raghuveer says. “That is the vision we have for female leadership at Harvard and beyond.”

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