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February 20,
2004
The selling of the candidate
Election hopefuls get
creative
JIM
BELL
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Egg-cellent adventure: Iqaluit East candidate Ed Picco doled out scrambled eggs
and sausages to hungry voters on Saturday Morning. (PHOTO BY PATRICIA D'SOUZA)
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For territorial election candidates in Nunavut, communicating with the voters
isn't as easy as it might look.
For one thing, all candidates run as independents - that's how Nunavut voters
like it.
It means, though, that candidates can't rely on the collective strength - and
money - of an organized political party.
When it comes to paying for things like brochures, signs, buttons, advertisements,
office space, and transportation, Nunavut candidates are mostly on their own.
What's more, Nunavut's independent candidates have limited access to advertising
time on broadcast media, except for four minutes of free time offered to each
of Nunavut's 81 candidates on CBC North radio.
In the South, on the other hand, political parties can use their combined strength
to saturate the airwaves with radio and television ads.
As well, Nunavut's two weekly newspapers are small, and don't have the space
or the time to give detailed coverage to every candidate. Newspaper election
ads aren't cheap either.
Because of that, may newly arrived southerners often conclude that Nunavut
elections are "quiet."
But in this election, candidates were far from quiet. In Iqaluit, they put
a lot of energy into finding creative methods of getting their messages across
- usually without the help of the media.
Big-tent
politics: Iqaluit Centre candidate Mike Courtney organized his own tea-and-bannock
breakfast last Saturday, cooked on a Coleman stove inside a canvas tent he put
up across from the Northmart store.(PHOTO BY PATRICA D'SOUZA)
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Mary Ellen Thomas, for example, found a unique way of communicating the idea
that she's a candidate with a heart, and a strong social conscience. At a Feb.
14 meet-the-candidate event in Iqaluit's parish hall sponsored by the Northern
Territories Federation of Labour, she baked a heart-shaped Valentine's Day cake
and gave away chocolates.
"I think I was able to effectively communicate the issues that I raised,"
Thomas said afterward.
At the same event, Norman Ishulutak, a candidate in Iqaluit East, used a different
medium to communicate a similar message. He brought a television set and VCR
to show a video made by a group of Iqaluit teens with whom he's been working.
An advocate for more programs targeted toward young people, Ishulutak used
the video to do more than just communicate his obvious concern for youth. A
well-known musician with the band Uvagut, Ishulutak also used the opportunity
to tell people about how he's been teaching teens how to sing and play.
On the same day, Mike Courtney made tea and bannock inside a big Nunavut-style
canvas tent across the street from the Northmart store, conveying the message
that he's a northern man who understands the traditional land-based life of
the North.
Feed
them and they will come: Iqaluit West candidate Paul Okalik with CKIQ disc-jockey
Glen Craig, at a pancake breakfast last Saturday. (PHOTO BY PATRICIA D'SOUZA)
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Courtney wasn't successful in his bid to oust Hunter Tootoo from the Iqaluit
Centre constituency. But his campaign efforts, which included more conventional
methods such as the distribution of signs, buttons and brochures, coupled with
the grueling work of going door-to-door in -25 temperatures, have encouraged
him to stay involved politically.
"I've got the bug now. For sure, I'm going to be back and people will
be hearing from me again," Courtney said.
Meanwhile, the three Iqaluit incumbents found that feeding the voters' stomachs
makes it a lot easier to feed their minds.
Iqaluit West incumbent Paul Okalik, along with Tootoo and Iqaluit East incumbent
Ed Picco, participated in a pancake breakfast held inside the Northern Lights
Café, an event that was broadcast live on Iqaluit's private radio station,
CKIQ.
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