Did anybody, such as the universities in question, even attempt to contact alumni in order to give them a heads up about this? I certainly didn't hear anything and my current address and other contact details are on file with the DCU (NIHED in my day) alumni association.Applications to be included in the first Register of Electors for the new constituency can be made online via www.seanadvoter.ie until tomorrow [Friday 24th January 2025].
If eligible voters miss tomorrow’s deadline to register for the Seanad Higher Education Constituency - they will not be able to apply again until the register reopens next year.
I registered a few weeks ago, same position as yourself, I was nui graduate late 90s but never registered for seanad election before. I haven't heard anything since so I doubt I will be registered in time for this election. I think they have to look through their degree records to match your degree to the person now registering, so that I would imagine is a slow process.Thanks - I was thinking more of people, like me - as a graduate of NIHED/DCU back in the 80s, who were not previously on the Seanad electoral register and are brand new to this system. I've just submitted my application but don't have a current passport so uploaded a picture of my most recent one which expired a few years ago. No idea if that will be a deal breaker...
Seriously? If you actually read my posts you'd see that I already clearly stated that they have my current contact details on file.Seriously….how is DCU supposed to know with any precision where its graduates live four decades later?
Why would that be a concern for any third level institution?Also is it on their interests to register new members quickly , since that dilutes the vote of all those already on the register ?
I was half joking but I doubt there would be huge motivation to get lots of new people registered since there could be a bit of exclusivity involved. If loads of new people are registered quickly then the usual type of liberal university senator might not get elected.Why would that be a concern for any third level institution?
I'd count it as more likely that they'd be delighted with a bigger voter pool as that would confer more legitimacy and prestige on the Seanad seats on offer. Nobody would prefer to preside over anything resembling a pocket borough.I was half joking but I doubt there would be huge motivation to get lots of new people registered since there could be a bit of exclusivity involved. If loads of new people are registered quickly then the usual type of liberal university senator might not get elected.
In any case the register is for future seanad elections not this one coming up
New registration system is not for the current election, although it sounds like you were eligible to register on the old NUI system also - probably too late though, as ballots already went out.I registered a few weeks ago, same position as yourself, I was nui graduate late 90s but never registered for seanad election before. I haven't heard anything since so I doubt I will be registered in time for this election. I think they have to look through their degree records to match your degree to the person now registering, so that I would imagine is a slow process.
Also is it on their interests to register new members quickly , since that dilutes the vote of all those already on the register ?
GDPR is also thrown about willy nilly, but it almost certainly applies here.There may well be a procedural problem
I provided my details to DCU for, among other things, receiving communications (including the occasional newsletter) from the Alumni department so they could easily (and perfectly legitimately within GDPR rules) have simply circulated an issue of the newsletter that apprised readers of the need to apply for inclusion on the new Seanad electoral register.GDPR is also thrown about willy nilly, but it almost certainly applies here.
People probably never provided their personal data consenting to being alerted to a new Seanad constituency.
It's going to be slightly less wrong, as they're adding more universities' to the list of eligible voters.I have never used my vote on the NUI panel, on principle because I don't think it is right that graduates get an additional vote non available to non graduates. This is simply wrong in my opinion.
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