Thursday's SAG election was a victory for the moderate coalition. Yet, strangely enough, the leaders of the losing hardline faction will all find seats on the national board, and will continue to be a shadow government within the union's Hollywood board--a board on which none of the key moderate leaders will be voting members.
Yes, the moderates (Unite for Strength (UFS) / USAN / RBD / independents) won the national offices - President and Secretary-Treasurer - and picked up additional national board seats and many on the
In fact, paradoxically, 1st VP and failed Membership First presidential candidate Anne-Marie Johnson will probably continue as 1st VP, ex-president Alan Rosenberg will almost certainly be back on the national board in a matter of days despite winning only an alternate seat, MF leader David Joliffe will probably be on the Hollywood board and effectively on the national board, and MF leader Kent McCord continues on the national and Hollywood boards.
Meanwhile, none of the key moderate leaders will be on the
How could the election yield so much change in the national offices and so little in the Hollywood Division? Here's the scenario [UPDATED: Para. 3 is new.]:
1. The moderates seemingly have 27 seats on the
2. However, look closer. One of those 6 pre-election seats was held by Ken Howard. Under the SAG Constitution and By-Laws, a national officer can't also be an elected member of the national board or a Divisional board. So, the day he became president, Howard lost his elected seat on the national and Hollywood boards, and, indeed, his name has been replaced on SAG website listings with "(1 TBD)." That leaves the moderates with 26 seats on the
3. But, when it comes to electing officers (such as 1st VP) or selecting replacements for the
4. So, Membership First controls who the
5. Thus, although
6. Elevating
7. MF will also presumably vote to appoint newly reelected board member Anne-Marie Johnson as 1st VP (the VP office from Hollywood) and thus as Divisional chair, to the extent that she doesn't automatically continue in these offices (note that the updated SAG website still lists her as 1st VP and divisional rules say that the 1st VP is also the chair). This is possible because Johnson ran for two seats in this election--president, but also, as a backup, national board member. She won the latter.
8. As a result, MF will have skilled leadership as voting members in the
9. In contrast, Unite for Strength will have none of its leaders as voting members in the Hollywood boardroom: Ned Vaughn and Assaf Cohen didn't win seats on the Hollywood or national boards, and Ken Howard and Amy Aquino, as national officers, are non-voting, ex officio members of the Hollywood board, as well as the NY and RBD (Regional Branch Division) boards. One wonders whether Howard and/or Aquino will be able to find time to attend every
10. Note also that the Hollywood board gets to appoint the Hollywood members of the TV/theatrical contract negotiating committee, if there is one, and that
11. Remember too that it was the
Bottom line: SAG's byzantine governance structure and geographical divisiveness will once again facilitate disunity. Among other things, the question becomes, will SAG and AFTRA be able to reestablish Phase 1 joint bargaining? The divided governance certainly makes it harder.
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