January 16, 2004
Curley to campaign on Rankin's revival
Veteran politician returns
after 10-year absence
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
Tagak
Curley: riding to Rankin Inlet's rescue. (FILE PHOTO)
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Tagak Curley has emerged
from Nunavut's political past in hopes of changing its future.
Earlier this week, the
59-year-old founding president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, chief negotiator
for the Tunngavik Federation of Nunavut, and a former minister of economic development
in the Government of the Northwest Territories, ended more than a decade out
of politics when he filed his application to run for the territorial seat in
Rankin Inlet North.
And he's returned with
promises of resurrecting Rankin Inlet.
In Curley's view, the Government
of Nunavut has neglected Rankin Inlet, letting it slip into a state of economic
decay. He said the steady exodus of jobs and services - such as the Nunavut
Housing Corp. and Arctic College headquarters - over the past 10 years marks
how the community has lost status in the territory.
"People that I know
desperately, desperately want me to run," Curley said. "So it's time,
Rankin needs to be rebuilt. It's been in decline and hasn't grown. And it needs
serious representation."
Curley admitted he hesitated
to re-enter politics, and was coy about his intentions to run until now. But,
aside from Rankin Inlet's local struggles, he said a lack of senior leadership
in the last government, and the inclusion of protection for homosexuals in the
Nunavut Human Rights Act pushed him back into politics.
Curley, a high-profile
critic of the Human Rights Act, opposes the protection of Nunavummiut
on the grounds of sexual orientation because he says the term "sexual orientation"
is not defined. Moreover, he suggests that its use in legislation threatens
the culture and morality of the territory.
"We're giving a special
category, apparently, of certain rights that are not defined, that are very
... discrete, you don't know what it means," he said in an interview. "But
if you believe in your Creator, in your God, what does he say about those things?
Is that acceptable to God?"
Asked how his commitment
to religion would affect his campaign, Curley said he expects it would increase
his support because voters would be assured of getting an MLA free of vices
like greed and ego.
"My faith and my life
are completely inseparable," he said.
Despite citing the Human
Rights Act as a reason to run in the election, Curley said voters are more
concerned about bread-and-butter issues, including jobs and local services.
To reverse Rankin Inlet's
economic decline, Curley is campaigning to improve marine infrastructure with
docks and start an educational centre to teach trades like electricity and plumbing
to local residents. Both would be a boon for the construction industry, Curley
argues, and would return Rankin Inlet to its former status as a regional transportation
and services hub.
"Strategically, Rankin
is a good central location for Nunavut, providing services not just for communities
but for Nunavut as a whole," he said.
Beyond the Rankin renaissance,
Curley also hopes to tackle pan-territorial problems, such as the government's
shrinking resources. To meet infrastructure needs without going into debt, Curley
said Nunavut will have to turn to the private sector to start financing capital
projects. Streamlining the application process for mining companies will also
be key to Nunavut's future prosperity, he said.
"Sometimes, I think
we spend too much time talking about how we're going to plan, that some of the
potential investors don't bother [with Nunavut] and go elsewhere," said
Curley, who as president of Nunavut Construction Corp., oversaw the completion
of more than $100 million in government infrastructure throughout Nunavut.
Although critical of leadership
in the last government, Curley declined to confirm whether he wants to become
the next premier of Nunavut. That can only be decided if he is elected, he said.
However, Curley expects
the "lack of seniority" in the last government will lead to changes
in the next.
"I think you will
see a whole lot more of depth of representation from Nunavut, not just business
experience, or financial whatever, or non-Inuit, but people who are really rooted
in their culture and their communities," Curley said. "Because a lot
more people will be running who are not directed just by ambition - pure political
ambition - but by issues."
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