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The race for the presidency

could realistically have a foreign policy and his incoherence on student representation. Despite their apparent dominance in debate, it is worth remembering that they will be up against Hadlow’s strong CUCA following Braude’s status as the darling of the left. In comparison, Fletcher’s Jesus power base is on the wane a year after graduation and Kirmani is a virtual unknown. Fletcher insisted repeatedly that a second term would “not leave [him] too far removed from normal students to be in touch” and, not disputing that he was a “safe pair of hands”, advocated a strategy of building on the “huge achievements” of his first year. Both Fletcher and Kirmani voiced opinions in favour of non-alcohol CUSUents nights to allow those marginalised by the current Cindies/Life line up to feel more involved, and both wanted to build on the current access program. Fletcher’s manifesto demonstrated his impressive grasp of the intricacies of University politics with commitments to campaigning for anonymous class lists nestling alongside plans to improve student public transport discounts.


Kirmani has spent the last year turning around the University’s ailing Pakistan Society as well as setting up a National Union of Pakistani Students and aims to continue with the firebrand politics - inspired by Malcolm X - that have seen him grab serious media coverage in the last year, although if the number of exclamation marks he managed to slip into his manifesto are anything to go by then his press statements will make interesting reading. In terms of drive and political nous there is probably little to chose between Fletcher and Kirmani; their politics are similarly central, their aims moderate and it is unlikely that they will make any serious errors, certainly if their impressive interview performances are anything to go by. Yet, Kirmani’s staus as an unknown outside the Islamic world may be his great undoing. Fletcher appeared confident that a (historic) second term is what CUSU and Cambridge need, and whether he convinces the student body of this will depend largely on whether Kirmani’s Asian-centred experience makes him seem too marginal and whether protest

votes pull the peripheral candidates into contention.

Posted on Monday 3 March 2008