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Sports / Cycling

UCI chief McQuaid loses Swiss backing

Published: 22 Aug 2013 - 02:29 am | Last Updated: 30 Jan 2022 - 05:11 pm

LAUSANNE: International Cycling Union (UCI) president Pat McQuaid (pictured) received a blow yesterday to his bid to win a third term in the role as the Swiss Cycling Federation withdrew their backing for his candidacy.

Irishman McQuaid had already seen his homeland remove their support for him but then thought he been granted a reprieve when the Swiss stepped in.

But now he has lost their backing as well, he is left needing to change the rules in order to stand for election.

“The Board of Directors of Swiss Cycling have reversed their decision from May 13, 2013 concerning the nomination of Pat McQuaid and decided yesterday (Tuesday) to withdraw the nomination of Pat McQuaid for re-election to the UCI presidency,” said the Swiss Federation in a statement.

“By consequence the arbitration requested by three members of Swiss Cycling has been cancelled as it is no longer of any use.”

Three members of the board had previously contested Swiss Cycling’s decision to support the Irishman.

He is due to stand against longtime British Cycling president Brian Cookson in the election in Florence on September 27.

But in order to do so he needs to secure a modification to the UCI statutes as under current legislation he is ineligible.

Cookson released a statement expressing his belief that McQuaid should not be allowed to stand for re-election.

“This latest development is of real significance to the Presidential election process. It leaves Mr McQuaid in a very difficult position, particularly when viewed alongside his failure to receive a nomination from his own national federation, as required under the constitution of the UCI,” he said.

“It also places further question marks against his other ‘nominations’ whose validity is in serious doubt and remain a matter of genuine concern to many in the cycling world.

“No attempts at manipulation and legal bluster can take away the doubts and questions.

“The important principle in any democracy is that you must respect the rules as they are, not how you’d like them to be. My hope remains that we have a democratic process based on the rules of the race when it started rather than those made up half way through.”

Cookson was referring to a move by the Malaysian Federation, which has proposed an amendment that would allow a presidential candidate to be supported by two member Federations rather than his own affiliated federation.

If that is successful, McQuaid would be able to stand for election as he has the support of the Thai and Moroccan federations.

The reason he had managed to stay in the race through Swiss support was that although he is Irish, he lives in Switzerland, where the UCI is based. AFP