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AFN chief vows to influence party platforms in advance of federal election

Jul 23, 2019 | 11:38 AM

FREDERICTON — The national chief of the Assembly of First Nations is calling on members to lobby all parties in an effort to influence political platforms ahead of the federal election in October.

“With the federal election coming, I want to say now the importance of voting and the importance of influencing all party platforms,” Perry Bellegarde said Tuesday as he addressed the AFN’s annual general assembly in Fredericton.

He said the national group was able to influence parties’ policy in 2015 with its Closing the Gap document spelling out priorities.

“We set up meetings with the people designing the party platforms. That’s the same process we’re going to do again for October,” Bellegarde said.

He said 61.5 per cent of eligible First Nations voters cast their ballots in 2015, and he wants that number to increase during the upcoming election.

“If you want to become prime minister or member of Parliament, you better listen to our people and our concerns, because we vote now and have impact,” he said. “That’s what’s going to happen in October. We’re not going to be pushed to the side anymore.”

Bellegarde said the group’s top priority is climate change.

“I call it climate destruction,” he said. “We’ve got to show everybody the process moving to clean energy. Let’s see the process. Let’s see the plan.”

The second priority is restorative justice. He said that involves recognizing policing as an essential service but also adopting a broader view of the law.

“Why are there so many First Nations people in jail?” he asked. “There’s not only common law and civil law recognized in Canada. There’s got to be room for First Nation’s law and natural law — Creator’s law,” he said. 

Bellegarde said he also wants to see which parties commit to acting on all the recommendations in the report of the inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

He called on First Nations people to make an informed choice after looking at the parties’ priorities.

The Canadian Press