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Pressure mounts on Swiss Cycling president to withdraw McQuaid UCI election nomination

Cash-strapped Swiss Fed under pressure for its support of one of its newest members, so Just weeks before UCI presidential election in Florence, could current UCI president end up without a backer?

Swiss Cycling’s president Richard Chassot is under pressure from fellow board members to withdraw the body's nomination of Pat McQuaid for UCI president. It has emerged that McQuaid, the current head of the UCI, only became a member in May this year of the national federation of the country where world cycling’s governing body is based, and where he has lived since 2005.

The Zurich-based newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung says that one of the reasons why Swiss Cycling is being urged to withdraw its backing is the legal challenge launched by Skins chairman Jaimie Fuller as well as former Swiss national coach Kurt Buergi, subsequently joined by ex-board member Mattia Galli and former pro cyclist Patrick Calcagni.

The cash-strapped federation could reportedly face a bill of up to 100,000 Swiss Francs should the decision of a three-member arbitration panel presided over by law professor Lukas Handschin, which meets on 22 August to decide the issue, go against it.

Initially, the board of Cycling Ireland, which had nominated McQuaid in 2005 and 2009, backed him in April to stand for a third term at the election, which will take place during the UCI World Congress in Florence next month.

However, a procedural breach of Cycling Ireland’s constitution resulted in the nomination, which had provoked an outcry from many of the federation’s members, being withdrawn. The issue was put to a vote at an Emergency General Meeting in Dublin in June, with McQuaid’s nomination rejected.

Article 51 of the UCI’s own constitution provides that “the candidates for the presidency shall be nominated by the federation of the candidate.” and it did not seem especially unusual that the former professional rider would be a member of the federations of both his home country and the one in which he lives.

But the Neue Zürcher Zeitung’s report appears to confirm suspicions held in some quarters that McQuaid only joined Swiss Cycling out of expedience to secure an alternative nomination for this September’s election should he not secure one from Cycling Ireland, which had nominated him in 2005 and 2009.

Should Swiss Cycling withdraw McQuaid’s nomination – or be forced to do so as a result of that arbitration hearing – then the current UCI president’s last throw of the dice if he is to contest to the end what has been a fractious election campaign with his sole opponent, British Cycling president Brian Cookson, will depend on a controversial proposed rule change to the UCI constitution.

Last week, it was revealed that the Malaysian Federation and Asian Continental Confederation had proposed a change to Article 51 of the UCI constitution, which would allow future UCI presidential candidates to be nominated by any two member federations.

The UCI announced that exceptionally, that amendment, if voted through, would be applied retrospectively to this year’s election, and the Thai and Moroccan federations have also said that they would nominate McQuaid, who has admitted to being a member of “six or seven” federations.

That proposed rule change, and particularly the stated intention to backdate it, was greeted with astonishment from many within the sport, with Cookson, who has promised to restore credibility the governing body if elected as well as hold an independent inquiry into the UCI’s role in the sport’s recent doping scandals, saying it reflected an “attempted dictatorship” of the organisation on McQuaid’s part.

UCI management board member Igor Makarov, also president of the Russian federation and owner of the Katusha team, has said that he plans to launch a legal challenge to the attempted change to Article 51.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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4 comments

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fuzzywuzzy | 11 years ago
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It's pretty obvious Pat cares more about lining his pockets than he does about cycling. If, somehow, his dodgy back-room dealing does get him re-elected I hope there's mass protests within the UCI and his whole little world comes crumbling down around him. The UCI with McQuaid and Verbruggen involved has less credibility than Lance Armstrong.

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Sudor | 11 years ago
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€100,000 - sure Pat could stump up the cash !

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The Rumpo Kid | 11 years ago
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I wonder when Pat joined the Thai and Moroccan Federations?...

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SideBurn | 11 years ago
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I am sure that one of Lance's lawyers could sort this problem out for Pat.... if they are not too busy that is  19

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