|
February 14, 2003
Okalik dumps Anawak from
CLEY
Premier spanks minister
for opposing PPD job transfer
JIM
BELL
Jack Anawak, the MLA for
Rankin Inlet North, is a minister without portfolio, after Premier Paul Okalik
bounced him from the culture, language, elders and youth portfolio this week
for publicly opposing a cabinet decision to move the Petroleum Products Division
to Baker Lake from Rankin Inlet.
As "minister without
portfolio," Anawak will remain in cabinet. But hell have no departmental
responsibilities.
Okalik accused Anawak of
putting personal political considerations ahead of the interest of Nunavummiut,
and of undermining the work of other ministers.
"The responsibility
of a minister is to accept and support decisions made by cabinet, and not to
advance personal opinions or preferences. Ministers are expected to maintain
confidentiality of the information, discussions and disagreements of cabinet,"
Okalik told reporters Feb. 11. "Cabinet solidarity is essential to the
daily workings of government."
In recent interviews on
CBC radio and television, Anawak had criticized a plan that could see up to
13 jobs transferred to Baker Lake from Rankin Inlet.
The plan is part of a proposal
described in Okalik a massive report on Nunavuts energy needs, called
Ikuma II.
According to the plan,
the Rankin-based petroleum products division would be folded into a new Nunavut
fuel corporation. The fuel corporation would be located in Baker Lake alongside
the Nunavut Power Corporation, and both would operate as subsidiaries of a new
entity called the Qulliq Fuel Corporation.
Okalik said the Nunavut
cabinet approved the plan "in principle" late last year, and he pledged
that the government would not bend in carrying out its decentralization commitments.
"Our goal is to complete
decentralization so that we can move forward on other, more important, issues,
such as working to build economic opportunities in non-decentralized communities,"
Okalik said.
Okalik said stripping Anawak
of his departmental responsibilities is the only action hes able to take
to discipline his errant minister.
Under the consensus system,
ministers are chosen by the legislative assembly, not the premier. The premier,
however, is in charge of assigning departmental jobs.
When the legislative assembly
resumes sitting on March 4, MLAs could choose to conduct a non-confidence vote
aimed at removing Anawak from cabinet.
But Glenn McLean, the MLA
for Baker Lake, said its too early to say whether regular MLAs are willing
to take that step.
"I cant respond
to that. Im still trying to talk to the other MLAs at this point. Im
still trying to fathom what we do next and at this point it will be discussed
at our March session," McLean said.
He added, however, that
hes pleased with Okaliks decision to move the jobs to Baker Lake.
"[Okalik] told us
in 1999 that he is committed to decentralization, and everybody knows that I
represent a decentralized community," McLean said. "If youre
a minister, youre representing everybody, and thats what my constituents
in Baker Lake are saying."
South Baffin MLA Olayuk
Akesuk will now look after CLEY, making him the fourth minister to walk through
the departments revolving door since April 1, 1999. Kugluktuk MLA Donald
Havioyak and Hudson Bay MLA Peter Kattuk have also held the portfolio for brief
periods.
Anawak was Okaliks
biggest political rival even before the official creation of Nunavut in 1999.
As Nunavuts Interim
Commissioner, from April 1997 until the end of 1998, Anawak promoted a vision
of Nunavut as a user-friendly government that Nunavuts Inuit majority
would find less intimidating and autocratic than the Government of the Northwest
Territories.
After winning the Rankin
Inlet North seat by a margin of 27 votes, Anawak challenged Okalik for the Nunavut
premiers job, saying he wanted to continue the work that he started as
Interim Commissioner. But MLAs instead turned to the younger and relatively
inexperienced Okalik.
Okalik first gave Anawak
responsibility for the justice and community government departments. But Anawak
lost those portfolios in cabinet shuffles, and ended up with only the tiny CLEY
department.
With an annual budget of
about $9 million, CLEY is considered to be the least prestigious portfolio.
Manitok Thompson, the MLA
for Rankin Inlet South-Whale Cove, also spoke out against the impending move
of jobs from Rankin Inlet to Baker Lake last fall.
But Okalik said she made
those comments before cabinet had reached its decision on the Rankin to Baker
transfer, and for that reason she did not violate cabinet solidarity.
At presstime, Anawak had
not responded to a telephone message left at his office.
|