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Métis National Council president airs frustrations after Liberal ministers meeting

Métis National Council president airs frustrations after Liberal ministers meeting

CBC
Saturday, February 03, 2024 12:35:59 PM UTC

The president of the Métis National Council says the council is "frustrated" with the lack of progress on some priorities, following a meeting with Liberal cabinet ministers earlier this week.

Despite emerging generally happy from a summit between Métis leaders and federal cabinet ministers on Wednesday, Cassidy Caron expressed some exasperation.

"It's almost as if this government needs to take a step back and reassess what its reconciliation priorities are," said Caron in an interview Thursday at her downtown Ottawa office.

"We have evolved, changed and done a lot of work since 2015, but we can't be relying on the same promises from back in 2017 around reconciliation."

The Métis National Council was formed in 1983 to advocate for Métis constitutional rights. It today consists of provincial leaders from Ontario, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia, after the Manitoba Métis Federation withdrew in 2021.

The meeting was part of the federal "permanent bilateral mechanisms" with First Nations, Inuit and Métis leaders launched in 2017 — summit-style gatherings where politicians meet for candid talks.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced these mechanisms in December 2016, part of his promise of renewed nation-to-nation relationships with Indigenous Peoples. 

On that front, Caron is concerned about progress stalling after the federal cabinet shuffle last summer, echoing concerns raised by Natan Obed, president of the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami national advocacy organization.

And like Obed, Caron sees now as the time for the Trudeau government to begin fulfilling that nearly nine-year-old promise of transformative reconciliation.

When the bilateral process launched, she said, there were "quick wins" and steps taken toward new accords that would include sustainable 10-year funding deals. But since 2019, the government hasn't agreed to actually sign these accords, she said.

"They largely point to Canada's poor fiscal state, and with no money in the budgets, then we can't make progress on our priorities, and so we have been really frustrated," she said.

On Thursday, Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Gary Anandasangaree called it unfair to suggest the Liberals failed to deliver.

"By all independent accounts, we have moved the needle," he told CBC Indigenous. 

"The issue that I hear is the pace of progress, which I relate to and I recognize, but make no mistake, this government has moved significant issues forward on reconciliation."

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