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How to engage more Indigenous voters in Quebec's election

In 2018, voter participation in the northern Quebec riding of Ungava was just over 30 per cent, less than half what it was in the rest of the province. The Assembly of First Nations Quebec Labrador is organizing a debate Tuesday night to try change that.

'When Indigenous peoples' issues are on the ballot, they will participate,' says Bill Namagoose

Two people smile in a photo together.
Tunu Napartuk, left, is running in this election in the riding of Ungava for the Liberal Party and Mate Labrecque-Saganash, right, is also running in Ungava for Qubec solidaire. Having more Indigenous candidates is just one way observers say will help convince more Indigenous voters to engage with this provincial election. (Grand Council of the Crees)

OnMay 2, 1969, Quebec became the last province in Canada to give Indigenous peoples the right to vote.

Now, more than 53 years later and with a provincial election campaign in full swing, some observers say so much more could and should be done to increase voter participation in the North and among Indigenous voters living in the cities.

"For many Indigenous nations it's a debate of another nation," said Alexis Wawanoloath, who in 2007 became the first and only Indigenous person elected since 1969 to Quebec's National Assembly, when he won for the Parti Qubcois in Abitibi-Est.

The Assembly of First Nations Quebec Labrador (AFNQL)organizeda debate Tuesday night to try and convince more Indigenous voters to engage with this provincial election.

"It is essential that relations with First Nations be on the agenda," saidGhislain Picard, headof the AFNQL,in a release.

"We cannot afford another four years in the same spot and even taking steps back on various issues that affect us.Quebecis lagging behind in Indigenous matters and must do better."

Observers like Wawanoloath and Bill Namagoose, executive director of the Cree Nation government, say politicians and parties need to do a much better job of making them care.

"When Indigenous peoples'issues are on the ballot, they will participate, but if they're not, they won't, they'll stay away," said Namagoose.

Ungava voter participation lowest in Quebec

In 2018, voter participation in the northern Quebec riding of Ungava, for example, was just over 30 per cent, less than half what it was in the rest of the province, according to Elections Quebec and close to 16 per cent lower than the second to last place riding of D'arcy-McGee.

And a closer dive into the numbers shows that in Indigenous communities in Ungava, participation was even lower.

In the largest Cree community of Chisasibi, for example, voter turnout was just 8.6 per cent on election day. In Kuujjuaq, the largest community in Nunavik, it was 18.7 per cent on election day and that was with an Inuk candidate running. (Voting results in advanced polls are not included in these numbers, as Elections Quebec doesn't keep track of these numbers by community).

In 2007, Alexis Wawanoloath, right, became the first and only Indigenous member of Quebec's National Assembly since Indigenous peoples got the right to vote in Quebec in 1969. (Clement Allard/The Canadian Press)

So how to change that and increase voter participation?

There are a record number of nine Indigenous candidates running in this provincial election, including two in the riding of Ungava. Mate Labrecque-Saganash, from the Cree community of Waswanipi, is running for Quebec solidaire and Tunu Napartuk, from Nunavik, is running for the Quebec Liberals.

That will translate into a higher voter turnout, according to Wawanoloath.

"[Indigenous voters in Ungava] will be able to feel represented to see themselves in these candidates," he said.

Activist and columnist Mate Labreque-Saganash is running for Qubec solidaire in the riding of Ungava. She is among a record number of nine Indigenous candidates running in this election. (Mate Labreque-Saganash/ Facebook)

But having Indigenous candidates is only part of the answer, according to both Wawanoloath and Bill Namagoose, executive director of the Cree Nation Government.

Namagoose says parties need to get much better at reflecting Indigenous priorities in their platforms and says Indigenous organizations like the Assembly of First Nations Quebec Labrador have an important role to play.

In the 2015 and2019 federal elections, the Assembly of First Nations was commissioned by Elections Canada to get more Indigenous voters engaged. The efforts included supporting outreach efforts, organizing information campaigns and circulating information about party platforms on issues important to Indigenous voters, among others.

And it worked.

Between 2011 and 2015, the voting rate increased by 15 percentage points among Indigenous voters, according to Statistics Canada.

"[The AFN] estimates they turned over 15 seats to the Liberals, and that was the difference in the Liberals getting a majority [in 2015]," said Namagoose.

The debate Tuesday was only the second time the AFNQLhas created a way to discussIndigenous issues and priorities in a Quebec election. The first time was in 2007, and for both debates the organization didit without support from Elections Quebec, according to an AFNQL spokesperson.

Bill Namagoose, executive director of the Cree Nation Government, says provincial leaders need to do more to engage Indigenous voters. (Grand Council of the Crees)

But beyond debates, political parties also need to have more Indigenous voices in their caucuses and make those spaces safer forIndigenous politicians, said Wawanoloath.

He cites high-profile departures of the former federal justice minister, Jody Wilson Raybould, and MPs such as Robert-Falcon Ouellette, as examples of how much more work needs to be done.

Change to constitution

For Wawanoloath, increasing representation and Indigenous engagement in provincial and federal politics will take profound changes to thecurrent system, beyond even the limits of the constitution.

"It will be necessary to change our constitution so there is a real place for Indigenous peoples," said Wawanoloath.

He says reopening the constitution is needed to guarantee space in the senate and other assemblies for Indigenous voices.

"We see it in other countries. There are the Smi parliaments. There are special parliamentary commissions for the Maori in New Zealand," said Wawanoloath.

Tunu Napartuk, former mayor of Kuujjuaq, is running in the northern Quebec riding of Ungava. (Flix Lebel/Radio-Canada)

"There are many models that exist in the world that should inspire us and give Indigenous peoples a place, not only defined by the electoral system we have now," he said.

Wawanoloath says both the Trudeau and Legault governments have lost an opportunity to make more significant changes to increase Indigenous engagement in politics by not acting on promises to move to a more proportional model of representation.

Tuesday's debate was live-streamed on APTN,in both English and French and hosted by Marie-Eve Bordeleau.