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Indigenous

Mtis National Council president tells MPs self-government bill must pass

Cassidy Caron, president of the Mtis National Council, addressed the House of Commons Indigenous affairs committee calling for the passage of Bill C-53, which would recognize the Mtis Nation of Ontario, Mtis Nation of Alberta and Mtis NationSaskatchewan as Indigenous governments.

Cassidy Caron speaks against misinformation concerning Bill C-53

Cassidy Caron, President of the  Mtis National Council, takes part in an announcement in Ottawa on Jan. 12, 2023, regarding funding to support Mtis-led engagement that will inform the development of an Indigenous Justice Strategy.
Cassidy Caron, president of the Mtis National Council, takes part in an announcement in Ottawa on Jan. 12. On Thursday, she urged MPs to pass a Mtis self-government bill. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

The Canadian government must fulfilits long-standing promise of self-government for the Mtis Nation by passing Bill C-53, the president of the Mtis National Council told members of Parliament Thursday.

"Simply put,it's time," Cassidy Caronsaid in prepared remarks before the House of Commons Indigenous affairs committee in Ottawa.

Caron described that promise as 40 years in the making and flowing from failed constitutional talks, Supreme Court of Canada decisions, royal commissions and more.

"Your processes have repeatedly led to the same recommendations calling for the full recognition of Mtis rights," Caron said.

"Mtis self-government is not new. What is new is that Canada is finally taking action on what it has long promised."

Bill C-53 would recognize the Mtis Nation of Ontario (MNO), Mtis Nation of Alberta (MNA) and Mtis Nation-Saskatchewan (MN-S) as Indigenous governments, while laying out a path to approve still-unwritten treaties with them.

The committee isnow nearly a month into its study of the proposed legislation that hasrevealed many of the flashpoint issues in contemporary Mtis politics.

The bill has drawn concerns from First Nations in Ontario and some Mtis communities.

As president of the national council that advocates for the three provincial associations named in the bill, as well as the Mtis Nation B.C., Caron got her chance to refute the criticism on Thursday.

"There has been, unfortunately, a lot of misinformation that has been shared throughout this committee process," she said.

Caron saidthe bill doesn't concern land, adding that the self-government agreements the bill would ratify expressly state the agreements don't infringe on other groups, whether First Nations or Mtis, as some fear.

Ontario First Nationsreject the bill because of the inclusion of the MNO, which has previously faced concerns about the integrity of its citizenship registry. At issue are six new MNO communities the Ontario government recognized as historic in 2017.

Caronsaid the groups' Mtis citizenship registries are objectively verifiable, subject to audits and cross-referenced with the Indian Act status rolls to confirm potential Mtis citizens aren't registered with First Nations.

"As an Indigenous nation, we have a right to determine who our citizens are," Caron said.

A First Nations man holds a feather and speaks into a microphone at a podium.
Joel Abram is grand chief at the Association of Iroquois and Allied Indians. (AIAI Chiefs Council)

Speaking in the second panel after Caron, Grand Chief Joel Abram of the Association of Iroquois and Allied Indianswhich advocates for seven First Nations in Ontario, reiterated First Nations' opposition to the bill, warning it would destabilize relations with his member communities.

He described the bill as an overreach by MNO, echoing previously voiced fears the bill provides the group a beachhead to make land claims through the upcoming treaties.

"We stand united in our opposition," said Abram.

"I am here to ask you to kill the bill."

Other Mtis concerned

The Mtis National Council was formed in 1983 to advocate for Mtis rights following patriation of Canada's constitution.

The Manitoba Mtis Federation (MMF) was a founding council member four decades ago but withdrew in 2021 because of the dispute over MNO. The federation now backs the First Nations.

"We assure the committee that these 'historic Mtis communities' in most of Ontario have no connection to us," MMF housing minister Will Goodon testified on Nov. 8, framing the issue as "the attempted theft of the identity of a nation."

Nunavut MP Lori Idlout offered Caron the chance to explain why it's not identity theft.

"It's just not," Caron said.

"We know who we are, we know where we come from this piece of legislation simply affirms the right of self-government for these three Mtis governments."

The MMFalso warned the committee about the path the bill sets out to ratify treaties with the three Mtis groups, something MPs have also questioned.

The bill says the treaties could come into force through an order-in-council, which is a cabinet decision, signed by the Governor General, that doesn't require legislation or consideration by Parliament.

Caron said the scheme isn't new but was used previously in treaty talks with Yukon First Nations.

Meanwhile, some Alberta Mtis leaders who aren't represented by the MNAhave also expressed concern.

Ronald Quintal, president of the Fort McKay Mtis Nation, described the bill in a recent hearing as giving Parliament's blessing to a "hostile and undemocratic takeover of Alberta Mtis communities" who reject the MNA.

"If this bill passes in its current form, we will fight it in court. We will not be governed by the MNA," he said.

Caron replied that "Metis citizens have the right to choose who represents them," whether through the MNA or not.

There are about 160,000 people registered with the four Mtis associations who currently comprise the national council, Caron said.

Some 60,000 Mtis have chosen to register with the MNA, she said.