June 4, 2004
St-Julien a likely shoo-in for Nunavik
BQ rival frustrated
that incumbent able to criss-cross northern Quebec
JANE
GEORGE
Guy
St-Julien, the Liberal incumbent for Nunavik-Eyou, is counting on votes from
Inuit and Cree to put him over the top in the June 28 federal election. (FILE
PHOTO)
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Nunavik doesn't have its own federal riding, but its 4,500 votes are key in
deciding who wins the June 28 federal election in the sprawling Nunavik-Eeyou
riding.
This time, just as in the two last federal elections, winning the Inuit, Cree
and Naskapi vote is essential for victory, since First Nations and Inuit comprise
one-fifth of the 58,000 potential voters.
That's why Liberal incumbent Guy St-Julien is off and running again from one
end of the huge riding to the other. His goal: to get out the northern vote
on the 28th. With that, he can easily win again.
According to St-Julien, his campaign tour is going "super-well,"
but he isn't taking his re-election for granted and he's appealing to his "Inuit
friends" to get out and vote.
During the 1997 federal election, St-Julien received fewer votes than the Bloc
Québécois candidate in the southern portion of the riding, but
won because of the 1,578 votes he received in Nunavik.
In 2000, votes from the Inuit and Cree regions once more gave St-Julien the
edge he needed over a popular BQ candidate.
Outside the northern portion of the riding, the BQ candidate and St-Julien
were neck-and-neck, with each pulling 41 per cent of the vote, but Nunavik and
the two most northerly Cree communities, Chisasibi and Whapmagoostui, gave St-Julien
a whopping 77 per cent of the vote.
This time, the total number of potential votes from First Nations and Inuit
is even higher than before as the native communities of Ouje-Bougamou and Kawachikamach
are now within the riding's boundaries, while the francophone town of Amos is
out. Called "Nunavik-Eeyou" until Sept. 1, the riding changes its
name again to Abitibi-James Bay-Nunavik-Eeyou.
Louis Lavoie, news director with the l'Écho Abitienne newspaper in Val
d'Or, said St-Julien is likely to be re-elected because of his enormous popularity
among First Nations and Inuit.
St-Julien's edge is so large that none of the other parties, including the
BQ, which may sweep aside the Liberals in other regions of Québec, is
even attempting to run a "star" candidate in the riding. As well,
no high-profile Liberal ministers are planning to visit Val d'Or, or Lavoir,
a sure sign the Liberals consider the riding safe.
St-Julien has represented the region in the House of Commons since the 1980s,
although he spent four years out of office from 1993 to 1997, as a member of
the Progressive Conservative Party.
Reached on the hustings on the long road between Matagami and Chisasibi, St-Julien
had no trouble reciting a long shopping list of what he wants to accomplish
for Nunavik over the next four years - including a sweeping Canada-Inuit agreement
that would take off where the James Bay and Northern Agreement stops, and a
guarantee for more housing and recreational facilities, assistance for elders,
improved transportation and regional economic development and self-government.
St-Julien also said he won't forget about pursuing the investigation into the
killing of Inuit sled dogs in the 1950s and 1960s and the need to build a better
museum in Inukjuak.
St-Julien said he still intends to fight for a separate seat for Nunavik in
parliament, so that an Inuk will eventually represent the region.
Despite his lack of fluency in English, St-Julien has managed to develop a
relationship with Nunavimmiut.
"I'm there for all the big occasions. Sometimes the events that are very
sad, such as the avalanche in George River," he said. "I am there
for the tears and the joy, les pleurs et la joie."
The BQ candidate, Yvon Lévesque, is an affable, retired construction
worker and union activist who has travelled as far north as Kuujjuaraapik. He's
frustrated that, as a member of Parliament, St-Julien has the means to travel
to the northern communities that will decide this election. Largely uninformed
about the issues in Nunavik, Lévesque said the first thing he'd do if
elected is head north.
Lévesque said it's possible to win without northern, native support,
but he would prefer to have this backing.
A sovereigntist, Lévesque said he would still work on behalf of the
region in Ottawa, not for Quebec sovereignty.
Additional candidates are expected to officially register by next week's deadline
from the NDP, the Green Party, and the Conservative Party.
Elections Canada's electoral office is in Val d'Or. The riding's chief electoral
officer, Richard Séguin, said polls will be set up in every Nunavik community
on June 28, while voters in Kuujjuaq will also have an advance poll on June,
18, 19 and 21. Other voters may request absentee ballots by mail, by calling
1-866-216-5311.
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