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March 7, 2003
Anawak's future in cabinet lies with fellow MLAs
Rankin Inlet MLA faces non-confidence vote in legislature
PATRICIA D'SOUZA
Rankin Inlet North MLA Jack Anawak says he won't fight any decision to remove
him from cabinet.
(FILE PHOTO)
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MLAs were to decide yesterday
whether to remove Jack Anawak as a member of the executive council of the legislative
assembly.
On Tuesday, Iqaluit Centre
MLA Hunter Tootoo made a notice of motion, seconded by Kugluktuk MLA Donald
Havioyak, to put the matter to a vote.
According to legislative
assembly rules requiring two days' notice before motions are introduced, the
matter was to be heard on Thursday, after Nunatsiaq News' press deadline.
"He's entitled to
make his motion," Anawak said at the close of sitting on Tuesday.
"If I really thought
this was being done because of a moral wrong I've committed, I wouldn't be questioning
it."
The Rankin Inlet South
MLA said he would use the 20 minutes allotted to him on Thursday to defend himself,
but he would not fight a decision to remove him from cabinet.
"This is more of
a technical issue. If this is how the Government of Nunavut is going to operate,
then we're betraying the people who fought so long for Nunavut," he said.
In mid-February, Premier
Paul Okalik stripped Anawak of his responsibilities for the department of culture
language, elders and youth.
The move was a public
reprimand for Anawak's opposition to a cabinet decision to move the 13 employees
of the petroleum products division of the department of public works to Baker
Lake from Rankin Inlet.
But reducing Anawak to
"minister without portfolio" was the extent of Okalik's power. Only
caucus as a whole can remove him from cabinet.
In late February, Tootoo
told Nunatsiaq News that if no other MLA made a motion to remove Anawak
from cabinet, he would do it himself.
"What Jack did was
a breach of trust that all members of the assembly put in him by violating an
oath that all cabinet ministers take. If he wants to be critical of the government
and have the luxury of doing that, he can be a regular member," Tootoo
said.
Tootoo said he supports
Okalik's demotion of Anawak, and he believes that most MLAs will too.
"They all knew going
into cabinet, and he should know more than anybody, that you have to support
the decisions of the government when you're in cabinet. To me, he seems to be
very hypocritical in his behaviour."
Four years ago this
week
According to a transcript
from the Nunavut Leadership Forum on March 5, 1999, Anawak knew what he was
getting into by accepting a nomination for cabinet.
"We have to give
our ongoing support to our premier because the premier is not only representing
us but also the people of Nunavut," Anawak said at the time.
But what Anawak really
wanted was to be premier. Earlier that day exactly four years ago this
week he told MLAs that as territorial leader he would work for the good
of all Nunavummiut, not just his constituents.
"We each have our
own constituents as members-elect but we all have to keep in mind that our first
priority will be the people of Nunavut as a whole. This is what we have been
talking about," he said.
"As long as we have
Nunavut as our priority, we won't be making mistakes. Some of us will say, 'I
want my constituency to get this or that,' because we also have to pay attention
to our constituencies but we have to focus on Nunavut as a whole."
He also spoke out in favour
of decentralization, though he came to oppose the decentralization of PPD.
"When we were setting
up our government we were told by the planners that this is going to be a decentralized
government. So we have 10 communities that were identified to be bases for the
Nunavut government departments," he said.
"We have decentralization
so the government will be closer to the people of the communities."
Of course, Anawak lost
the top job to Okalik, and held several portfolios in cabinet before being assigned
to CLEY in a cabinet shuffle last year.
The move was seen as a
demotion for Anawak, as CLEY is the smallest department in the GN. At $9 million,
it's budget represents only one per cent of the government's total budget.
With files from Jim
Bell in Iqaluit.
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