July 2, 2004
Bloc Québécois takes Nunavik-Eeyou
Guy St-Julien loses
long-term seat by 400 votes
JANE GEORGE
Guy St-Julien,
Nunaviks colourful incumbent MP, went down to defeat on June 28. (FILE
PHOTO)
|
Nunavik has a new, sovereigntist member of parliament following the narrow
victory of Yvon Lévesque, the Bloc Québécois candidate
in the Nunavik-Eeyou riding.
The election was a cliffhanger for Lévesque who was trailing Liberal
incumbent Guy St-Julien by a few hundred votes around 10:30 on election night.
But a little after midnight, the tide turned and Lévesque won by a few
more than 400 votes.
Getting out the vote on Monday from Bloc-friendly voters in the southern part
of the riding is how Lévesque won the election and, even then,
it was a tight race.
But Lévesque wasnt surprised. I was relaxed. Id done
what Id said I would do. Im like that I do what I say I will.
I did everything I could, and we all worked very hard, Lévesque
said on Tuesday morning from Val dOr.
According to the final tally, Lévesque received 12,503 votes or 45.01
per cent of the ballots cast, while St-Julien received 12,067 votes or 43.44
per cent.
In Nunavik, St-Julien received 1,720 votes, or about 71 per cent; Lévesques
support was only about nine per cent.
Im not surprised people in Nunavik didnt vote for me because
they have never met me, and I can understand that. Now that Im elected,
I will go and meet them. I will do every municipality and community, Lévesque
promised.
Only about 40 per cent of the registered voters cast ballots in Nunavik, while
in the southern centres of Val dOr and Chibougamou, the turnout was heavier
and both towns went for Lévesque.
Many people felt it would be even more pronounced in my favour,
Lévesque said. People were frustrated by the sponsorship scandal,
the wasting of money. They believe the Bloc will look after their interests
in this respect. It was the Blocs credibility against the Liberals
lack of credibility. Thats what did it.
Overall in the riding, François Dionne, from the Conservative Party,
received 1,252 or 4.51 per cent of the vote; Pierre Corbeil of the NDP, 1,090
votes or 3.92 per cent; Martin Fournier of the Green Party, 866 or 3.12 per
cent.
In Nunavik, the Green Party did even better, winning about seven per cent of
the vote, mainly from Inukjuak, Kangiqsujuaq and Kangiqsualujjuaq, while the
NDP received about eight per cent of the vote, mainly from Salluit, Inukjuak,
Kuujjuaq, Umiujaq and Kuujjuaraapik. The Conservative Party received about five
per cent of the vote in Nunavik.
In 2000, St. Julien defeated the BQ candidate by a comfortable margin of 2,631
votes. In 1997, St-Julien handily re-took the seat he had lost in 1993 during
the last BQ sweep of Quebec.
But in this federal election, the BQ won back many of those Quebec seats, winning
two-thirds of Quebecs ridings and sending many well-known Liberal members
into defeat.
The result of this province-wide upset is that residents of Nunavik now have
a member of parliament they dont know well.
Lévesque is a sovereigntist from the heart, but he says
his election means northern communities will have a strong, honest voice in
Quebecs sovereigntist project.
Quebec has to adapt its future and consider ideas coming from the northern
communities if it wants to realize its project of independence. Im committed
to do it, said Lévesque before his election.
An electrician, Lévesque has worked as a union negotiator and advisor.
He has a love of the outdoors and has served as the head of Quebecs camping
association.
Among his campaign promises is a commitment to increase the importance of research
and education in the region.
Lévesque also said he would work on developing wind power as an alternative
energy source in the riding.
TOP
|