The annual Toastmasters business meeting is where we elect the board of directors, international officers, and amend our governing documents.
Clubs not assigned to a district are assigned to a district director as a proxy option, and so it is possible for districts to get more than 100% of “their” proxies for the business meeting. This year, we had one do that, exceeding the total number of clubs in the district!
The districts with the best percentage of club proxies were:
- D41 (region 13, North India and Nepal), got 103.4%, 150 proxies out of 145 paid clubs.
- D88 (region 14, Northeastern China), got 96.9%, 156 out of 161.
- D113 (region 3, Northern Mexico), 95.0%, 115 out of 121.
- D62 (region 6, Michigan), 94.9%, 56 out of 59.
- D23 (region 3, New Mexico, El Paso County, Texas, Oklahoma panhandle), 93.9%, 62 out of 66.
At the other end of the scale, we had:
- D122 (region 11, Pakistan), 18.6%, 8 out of 43.
- D92 (region 13, North and central Karnataka, India), 19.4%, 30 out of 155.
- D12 (region 2, Southern California), 20.5%, 16 out of 78.
The top quarter of districts beat 77% representation, the top half beat 69%, and the top 3/4 beat 56%.
The top regions were:
- Region 3 (Southwestern US and Mexico), 76.1%
- Region 8 (Southeastern US and Caribbean), 70.8%.
The vast majority of the votes come from clubs (98.8%, two per club), the rest are “at large” members, which is any current or past International Director (which includes International Presidents and officers), and the current District Directors (they each get one vote, regardless of any clubs they also may represent). At-large votes cannot be assigned to someone else (unlike clubs).
Undistricted clubs are randomly assigned a default district director for their proxy, if they choose to do so (they can assign it to anyone, just like all other clubs). That’s why there’s no “U” line in the spreadsheet (and that’s why a district can have more than 100% of the proxies).
Of those votes from clubs, the large majority are represented by the District Directors. There’s no way of knowing just how many, but based on my informal observations working in credentials, it’s probably 80-90% of the votes (though lower now with remote/online voting).
While there are many more important things for Toastmasters districts to devote scarce resources to (like helping struggling clubs and building new clubs), this shouldn’t be that hard to do. A district proxy chair with a committee to call clubs and round up proxies makes an excellent project!
Full details in the Excel spreadsheet here: Proxies-2022
Here’s my post on the 2019 proxy returns.
Where were you able to find this information?
The district proxy data has traditionally been posted on paper outside the credentials room each year. I don’t know if it was this year, but I simply asked WHQ staff to e-mail me a copy.