The Oxford Union has been plunged into fresh chaos after it kicked out another president-elect – this time over alleged election fraud.
Catherine Xu, a postgraduate student at Exeter College, was removed after an internal tribunal accused her of trying to get non-members to vote when she ran for the role.
It comes just months after George Abaraonye, a previous president-elect, was also ousted over appearing to celebrate on social media over the killing of US activist Charlie Kirk.
In the latest farce, Miss Xu is accused of distributing union membership cards to non-members to vote on polling day – a claim she denies.
The 200-year-old debating society organised a panel of former Union officers to hold an election tribunal, after Miss Xu won an election last month.
She was due to become President for the autumn term, until allegations emerged of her giving members’ cards to non-members so that they could use false names to vote.
According to tribunal documents published in student media, she was alleged to have procured ‘the impersonation of members of the society at the poll … by supplying an instrument and/or the Oxford Union membership card … for the purpose of enabling other persons to cast ballots at the poll in the names borne on them.’
During the tribunal, which sat on April 25-26, according to student newspaper The Cherwell, Miss Xu was found to have handed out a stack of union membership cards on polling day to people not entitled to vote and told them to cast ballots in other members’ names.

The Oxford Union has been plunged into fresh chaos after it kicked out another president-elect – this time over alleged election fraud (pictured: Catherine Xu)
A number of students were caught on March 6 voting using the identification of other members by Leo Zhou, a candidate for the secretary’s committee, who confronted them.
Some were reportedly voting in favour of Miss Xu.
Miss Xu allegedly discussed ‘finding people’ on social media platform WeChat, and sent a voicenote to a friend a few days after the election in which she asked whether she still had ‘the cards’.
The tribunal said it found this to be ‘particularly damning’.
Following the process, Miss Xu was ousted and barred from any further elections.
Miss Xu denied the allegations levelled against her and dismissed them as ‘political drama’.
She told the Oxford Student website: ‘I strongly reject the findings against myself and deny that any conspiracy existed.
‘I am deeply concerned that the decision appears to rely on evidence I believe to be fabricated or materially unreliable, yet imposes an extraordinarily severe and disproportionate penalty.
‘The union has seen increasing political drama and decisions based on contested evidence in recent years, and such a verdict risks encouraging more anonymous and fabricated allegations. This case must receive strict appeal review, with full procedural fairness and transparency.’
Before the election, Miss Xu had campaigned for more female speakers and said: ‘The union is way bigger than its scandals, but the perceived dysfunction keeps drowning out the good. I want to help fix that.’
The Daily Mail approached the Oxford Union and Miss Xu for comment.


