August 8, 2003
Okalik spreads some
pre-election cheer in Kivalliq communities
Jack Anawak not invited
to the party
PATRICIA D'SOUZA
BAKER LAKE - Premier Paul
Okalik completed his decentralization mandate last Thursday, at the same time
giving a pre-election boost to two loyal supporters in the legislative assembly.
In his final act of decentralization,
Okalik travelled to the Kivalliq region, meeting up with Manitok Thompson, MLA
for Rankin Inlet South-Whale Cove, and Glenn McLean, MLA for Baker Lake, in
their home communities.
The two-day trip allowed
Okalik to announce in person that the 13 jobs in the petroleum products division
of the department of public works will remain in Rankin Inlet, while 15 jobs
from the Iqaluit office of the Nunavut Power Corp. will be transferred to Baker
Lake.
The decision overturns
cabinet's controversial Nov. 21 agreement-in-principle to transfer PPD from
Rankin Inlet to Baker Lake, while also fulfilling the government's promise of
jobs to Baker Lake.
It's a win-win situation
for Okalik that casts attention once again on the very public loss of ministerial
power by his leadership rival, Jack Anawak.
Anawak, MLA for Rankin
Inlet North, spoke out against the agreement-in-principle in February and was
removed from cabinet in March.
The former minister was
conspicuously absent from the crowded PPD boardroom in Rankin Inlet, as Okalik
received praise from staff members and community leaders for finding a way to
make everybody happy.
Anawak, who was in Iqaluit
last week, said he did not know the premier's office had chartered a plane to
travel to Rankin and Baker, and didn't even learn of the announcement until
he heard it on CBC Radio Friday morning.
"Part of the problem
is I would have stole the show because it ties directly to my being ousted from
cabinet," he said in an interview this week. "What were they afraid
of? Stealing their thunder, their glory? I'm on the e-mail system. That's all
they had to do."
Instead, over the past
few months, Okalik forged a relationship with Lorne Kusugak, the mayor of Rankin
Inlet and one of Anawak's opponents in the 1999 territorial election.
Kusugak said after the
announcement that his quiet collaboration with the premier succeeded where Anawak's
vocal opposition did not.
"I think one of the
most effective things we did as a community is speak as one. I think our community
didn't jump up and down individually. The approach I took was to have one-on-one
meetings with the premier and the minister affected," Kusugak said.
"Jack did what he
thought was necessary to be heard."
Anawak's fellow Rankin
Inlet representative, Manitok Thompson, participated via teleconference in the
Thursday morning cabinet meeting that led to the final decision. And she was
at the airport to welcome Okalik when he arrived in her home community.
Thompson's loyalty to Okalik
appears to have grown stronger after she escaped censure from the premier for
speaking out against the PPD transfer a day after the agreement-in-principle.
During the vote to remove
Anawak in March, Okalik extended Thompson special permission to oppose the motion,
while demanding all other cabinet ministers vote in favour of it.
And during a cabinet shuffle
in April, he made her minister of education, the largest portfolio in government,
and perhaps the most prestigious because of the importance it plays in language
and culture issues.
Glenn McLean said he and
Okalik haven't always been on such good terms, but their relationship certainly
improved when the premier started throwing plum capital projects at the community.
In the past few years,
Baker Lake has welcomed the construction of a new Arctic College campus, an
elders' care facility, an elders' four-plex residence, a new territorial library,
and a $16-million high school announced when Okalik was acting minister of education
in 2001.
"I've been pretty
vocal about this community and it got to the point when I first got elected
of being pretty mean to the premier and trying to get jobs into Baker Lake,"
McLean told NPC employees who stayed late Thursday evening in anticipation of
Okalik's arrival.
"But as of today,
he's kept his promise. He's an honourable man. I'm running out of stuff to ask
for."
Okalik, meanwhile, took
the time to spread some pre-election goodwill, encouraging residents to re-elect
McLean. "I look forward to working with Glenn perhaps in the next term.
Let's give Glenn four more years," he said.
In return, McLean vowed
to support Okalik in his second bid for leadership. "I'd like to thank
Paul. He kept all his promises. I'd like to say if I am elected in the next
term I'll be supporting him for premier again."
It was a bold statement
for McLean, who has until now refused to state publicly whether he will seek
another term. And according to Anawak, McLean told him in March that he would
not run again.
"He thinks maybe he
can attach himself to the premier's coattails, whose coattails may not be all
that secure," Anawak said. "Glenn McLean might get elected, I'm not
so sure about our premier."
However, even Okalik admitted
that the 15 NPC jobs going to Baker Lake will come from his riding. NPC employees
in Iqaluit were learning of the plans as the premier was announcing them in
Rankin and Baker.
But this time, Okalik's
loss could be Anawak's gain.
"If I'm going to run
again, I could have a choice of seats," Anawak said.
"I could run in Iqaluit
West, not that I'm going to, or Iqaluit Centre. I don't know. I'm just taking
it easy now. Nobody's really thinking about elections right now.
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