YOUR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE
YOUR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE
Hi Eagles,
I’m running for UGBC President because I believe student government should work for students, and because I deeply care about the Boston College experience and culture that shapes us all. I have built strong relationships across student organizations and worked to foster community, inclusion, and advocacy throughout campus. Unlike many candidates, as an outsider, my leadership has not been rooted within UGBC itself. During my time at BC, I have served as Director of FACES Council, a College Road Resident Assistant, an RA Council Representative, an Essence Project committee member and outreach coordinator, a Public Health Research Assistant, a Stride Leadership Program mentee, a BC Model UN Delegate, and a server. I have experienced BC from the perspective of student organizations, residential life, research spaces, and identity-based communities, and I've seen firsthand how disconnected student government can feel from the students it represents. That is the culture I want to change.
I am running to reform UGBC’s structure and operations so that student government becomes more visible, accessible, and accountable. I want to restructure how UGBC listens, legislates, and allocates resources so that your voice truly sets the agenda. My leadership experiences have shaped me into a strong advocate who understands the diversity within the BC experience, and who takes initiative when students identify problems that need solving. I have experienced how meaningful dialogue, paired with structural change, can produce transformational results. Leadership, to me, is not about visibility. It is about building systems that outlast one administration and ensure accountability long after the election ends. I am not running to add something to my résumé. I am running because for three years I've worked through student organizations to advocate for students in administrative spaces. In my final year at BC, this campaign is my commitment to making one final, meaningful push toward lasting structural reform that is grounded in our Jesuit values of community, justice, and service.
I’m not running to make more promises.
I’m running to build a system that produces results transparently, responsibly, and representatively.
MCAS '27 I Political Science I Global Public Health and the Common Good
YOUR VICE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE
Hi Eagles,
I am running alongside Mary as her Vice President because I believe our student government is in need of reform. My work at Boston College has centered on building those relationships, amplifying student voices, and creating spaces where students feel seen, heard, and supported.
During my time at BC, I have served as a General Coordinator on the Queer Leadership Council and as the Head of the Culture and Community half of the new Allston–Brighton section of The Gavel that launched this semester. Through this work, I have developed experience managing teams, building partnerships, and facilitating conversations that bring together people with different perspectives and experiences. These roles have taught me how meaningful communication and collaboration can turn ideas into lasting initiatives that strengthen our campus community.
My early experience at Boston College also taught me firsthand how important accessible mental health support is for students navigating the pressures of college life. That perspective has deepened my commitment to advocating for stronger, more accessible mental health resources so that every student has the support they need to thrive. These experiences have shaped how I view leadership. I believe our student government should not operate separately from the communities it represents. It should listen actively, communicate clearly, and create opportunities for students to meaningfully shape the decisions that affect their lives.
As Vice President, I want to help build a student government that is more accessible, more responsive, and more connected to the everyday experiences of Boston College students. That means strengthening communication between UGBC and student organizations, ensuring student concerns are represented in administrative spaces, and building systems of accountability that last beyond any single administration.
This campaign is about more than winning an election. It is about building a student government that reflects the diversity, creativity, and commitment to community that define the Boston College experience.
MCAS' 27 l English l Political Science