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April 1 Souvenir Edition
May 24, 1979
On May 22 1979, Peter Ittinuar of Rankin
Inlet became the first Inuk to hold a seat in the House of Commons after he
took the Nunatsiaq riding for the New Democratic Party.
Ittinuar beats Curley to win Nunatsiaq
seat
Nunatsiaq News
IQALUIT Peter Ittinuar
edged Liberal candidate Tagak Curley by 77 votes on May 22 to claim the newly
formed federal riding of Nunatsiaq for the New Democratic Party.
"It was touch and
go all the way," a happy and elated Ittinuar said from his parents' home
in Rankin Inlet after his victory.
"Perhaps that's the
way it should be."
Of the 71 polls reported,
Ittinuar picked up a total of 1,963 votes for the NDP compared with Curley's
1,886, for the Liberals.
Progressive Conservative
party candidate Abe Okpik trailed in third place with 1,363 votes.
Nationally, the Conservatives
took just 136 of the 282 seats in the House of Commons less than half
and must now form a minority government under PC leader Joe Clark. Prime
Minister Pierre Trudeau has announced he will resign from office.
Meanwhile, Indian Affairs
and Northern Development Minister Hugh Faulkner was defeated in his own Peterborough,
Ont. riding.
The presence of a minority
government in Parliament will be good for the NDP, Ittinuar predicted. In such
a situation, "the voice of the NDP has to be heard," he said.
Curley speculated that
his campaign may have been hurt by NDP advertising that linked the Liberal party
to Baker Lake's current court case against the federal government.
He added that, given the
narrow gap between himself and Ittinuar, the Liberal party may call for a recount.
Okpik congratulated the
NDP on the party's victory, but noted that many of his own supporters were out
on the land on election day and did not cast votes.
As a young man, Okpik
said, Ittinuar appeals to younger voters, many of whom are unemployed in the
communities.
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