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'Fighting a losing battle': Ungava voter turnout is again lowest in Quebec

'Fighting a losing battle': Ungava voter turnout is again lowest in Quebec

CBC
Wednesday, October 05, 2022 12:32:16 AM UTC

Election results in the northern riding of Ungava in Monday's Quebec provincial election have led to renewed calls for more to be done to better serve Indigenous and northern voters. 

"We need our own riding," said Liberal candidate Tunu Napartuk, who came in third behind Cree candidate Maïtée Labrecque-Saganash representing Québec solidaire and incumbent Denis Lamothe, who won a second term for the ruling Coalition Avenir Québec.

Ungava once again had the lowest voter turnout in the province with just 30.3 per cent of eligible voters casting ballots, only slightly higher than in 2018. 

"Anyone who wants to run in the future in provincial elections will be fighting a losing battle," said Napartuk, adding the boundaries of the enormous riding of Ungava need to be redrawn. 

He says if the Îles de la Madeleine, a small archipelago in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, has its own riding, so should Nunavik.

"Nunavik deserves its own riding. We are 13,000 people, 14 Inuit communities, isolated and remote. We have our own reality," said Napartuk. 

The two-time mayor of Kuujjuaq also said campaigning was a challenge in a riding that is more than half the geographic footprint of Quebec and including the 14 Inuit communities of Nunavik, nine Cree communities of Eeyou Istchee and the non-Indigenous towns of Lebel-sur-Quévillion, Matagami, Chibougamau and Chapais. 

"I did the best that I could … to try and cover that whole area. It was a challenge in itself," said Napartuk, adding he was satisfied with his campaign.

Lamothe won with 36.2 per cent of nearly 9,000 votes cast, out of more than 29,000 eligible voters, according to Elections Quebec. Labrecque-Saganash came in second with 24.2 per cent of the ballots followed by Napartuk with 18.1 per cent. 

Labrecque-Saganash wasn't available for interviews Tuesday, but during the campaign expressed concerns that vote-splitting in Ungava was a real possibility with two strong Indigenous candidates running against each other. 

She was critical of Liberal leader Dominique Anglade in choosing Napartuk to represent the party, after she had already declared her candidacy for Québec solidaire. 

"I don't want to assume that it's voluntary from the party leader of the Liberals to divide the vote to benefit the CAQ, but that's a real possibility," said Labreque-Saganash during the campaign. 

"I don't know how productive it is toward Indigenous people to do something like that." 

Napartuk and Saganash together received more than 42.4 per cent of the votes cast in the riding, compared to Lamothe's 36.2 per cent. 

Read full story on CBC
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