AIPS/ LAUSANNE: Most of the 110 IOC members have arrived in Lausanne for the 143rd Extraordinary IOC Session, during which the IOC presidential candidates will deliver their presentations.
With two months to the election set for 20 March in Greece, campaigning has intensified within the Lausanne Palace, members’ traditional home-from-home .
The last candidate presentations took place in July 2013, in Lausanne, which featured soon-to be-elected president Thomas Bach of Germany and five other candidates; Sergey Bubka (Ukraine), Richard Carrion (Puerto Rico), Ser Miang Ng (Singapore), Denis Oswald (Switzerland) and Ching-kuo Wu (Chinese Taipei).
On September 10, Bach won the election after two rounds of voting. In the second round he received 49 votes, two more than he needed. His opponents got 44 votes combined: Bubka – 4, Carrion – 29, Miang Ng – 6, Oswald – 5. Wu was eliminated after the first round of voting.
In the first round, Bach got 43 votes, Bubka – 8, Carrion – 23, Miang Ng – 6, Oswald – 7, and Wu – 6. Miang Ng won the round 1 tie-break against Wu 56-36.
Since then, the IOC membership has welcomed many new faces, 80 of which are still IOC members. Hence, 72 per cent of the current IOC members are for the first time facing this critical decision that would shape the future of the Olympic body – in 2021, Bach was re-elected unopposed and members only had to simply vote yes or no.
Among the candidates for this year’s election, only Juan Antonio Samaranch, Prince Feisal Al Hussein and Kirsty Coventry were already IOC members at the time Bach was first elected.
Amid economic, environmental, security and technological challenges, the IOC members have to decide who among these seven (in order of the draw conducted in November by a Lausanne-based public notary); Prince Feisal Al Hussein (Jordan), David Lappartient (France), Johan Eliasch (Great Britain/Sweden), Juan Antonio Samaranch (Spain), Kirsty Coventry (Zimbabwe), Lord Sebastian Coe (Great Britain) and Morinari Watanabe (Japan), will usher in a new era for the Olympic movement.
The President will be elected by secret ballot for a term of eight years, with the possibility to stand for re-election for a second, four-year term. The term of office of the new IOC president will start on 24 June 2025.
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