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June 21, 2002
Ex-Iqaluit resident becomes
a Nova Scotia cabinet minister
A former Iqaluit resident
who once worked for Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. is now a minister in Nova Scotias
provincial government.
The Chronicle-Herald reported
this week that Cecil Clarke, the Progressive Conservative MLA for Cape Breton
North, will become the minister responsible for Nova Scotias Office of
Economic Development.
Clarke, 34, received the
appointment June 17, in a cabinet shuffle announced by Nova Scotia Premier John
Hamm.
He became an MLA after
defeating Helen MacDonald, then the leader of Nova Scotias New Democratic
Party, in a by-election held in March 2001. The The Chronicle-Herald says Clarke
told voters that he was the only candidate with a chance of getting into cabinet.
Clarke will also be responsible
for Nova Scotia Business Inc., a new Crown corporation that provides handouts
to businesses.
During the early 1990s,
Clarke worked for the Iqaluit Chamber of Commerce, and as executive assistant
to Natsiq Kangok, who was NTIs secretary-treasurer.
In 1994, Clarke found himself
at the centre of a minor controversy concerning allegations made by other NTI
officials that he was using NTI travel money to do work on behalf of the Progressive
Conservative party.
He left Iqaluit not long
after that.
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