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The beauty and challenge of elections in Canada's frigid north

The beauty and challenge of elections in Canada's frigid north

Yahoo27-04-2025

Nunavut is Canada's largest federal district. The entire territory - all 1.8 million sq km (695,000 sq miles) and its 40,000 people - will be represented by one person in parliament.
"Nunavut is at least three times the size of France. If it was its own country, it would be the 13th largest behind Greenland," Kathy Kettler, the campaign manager for local Liberal candidate Kilikvak Kabloona, told the BBC.
Located in the Arctic, where average temperatures in the capital city Iqaluit are below freezing for eight months of the year, it is so vast and inaccessible that the only way to travel between its 25 communities is by air.
"Yesterday, in 24 hours, we travelled 1,700 km (1,050 miles) by air and campaigned in Pangnirtung, Iqaluit, Rankin Inlet, and Arviat," said Ms Kettler.
"There are not very many people who understand the reality of the north," Ms Kettler said, describing the challenges of running a campaign where so much is different from southern Canada.
She recalled knocking on doors earlier this month as she campaigned for her candidate in -24C (-11F) temperatures.
She said it's rare in northern communities for people to knock before entering someone's home. Instead, the tight-knit culture permits visitors to simply "walk in and say hello" - almost unthinkable in other parts of the country.
As an Inuk from northern Quebec, she said it "feels weird" even for her to knock and wait for a response.
In Nunavut, one of Canada's three northern territories, the majority-Inuit population speak Inuktitut.
Ms Kettler said one of the biggest expenses was translating campaign signs and hiring an interpreter for Kabloona, the candidate.
Election issues for northerners too are unique.
"The national campaign is really focused on Arctic security and sovereignty, whereas our campaign here is focused on food security and people being able to survive," Ms Kettler said.
Food can be prohibitively expensive and there are infrastructure challenges to accessing clean water for a number of Indigenous and northern communities.
She was boiling water to drink while campaigning in Arviat, she said, and described being unable to rely on calling voters as she canvasses because a phone plan is the first thing they sacrifice to afford food.
The seat is currently held by the New Democratic Party (NDP), with incumbent Lori Idlout running for re-election.
James Arreak is the Conservative candidate.
Jean-Claude Nguyen, the returning officer in Nunavut, is responsible for conducting the election in the district.
He described how difficult it is to ensure ballots and voter lists get to every community - including to workers at remote gold mines.
"[Elections Canada] sent a team from our Ottawa headquarters via Edmonton and Yellowknife to the mine where they work, gave them sufficient time to vote, and then they brought the ballots back," he said.
Mr Nguyen also spoke about security considerations.
Once polls close, the ballots are counted at the polling station and then stored safely either with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), or a local hamlet - a small community that provides municipal services to its residents.
The ballot boxes are then flown to Iqaluit, and then to Ottawa.
Mr Nguyen recalled how in the 2019 election, a ballot box arrived with a big hole.
"When we asked the charter flight company what happened, they said it was eaten by a raven," he said laughing.
"That's part of the reality here in the territories, you have wild animals eating the ballot boxes."
No ballots were damaged by the bird.
Beyond all the challenges, Kathy Kettler said she is most drawn to the spirit of the people.
"The generosity, love, and care that people have for each other in every community shines through," she said.
"That's what keeps me going, and it's what makes campaigning across Nunavut so meaningful."
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Concacaf rejects Greenland's application for membership
Concacaf rejects Greenland's application for membership

New York Times

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  • New York Times

Concacaf rejects Greenland's application for membership

Greenland is being left in the footballing cold. Concacaf announced on Monday that the application for membership that was submitted by the Greenlandic Football Association (KAK, an acronym in the native language) has been unanimously rejected. No further details were provided. The announcement came after Concacaf held its 28th extraordinary congress in Miami ahead of the Gold Cup, which begins on June 14. Advertisement In a statement to The Athletic provided by KAK president Kenneth Kleist, he criticized Concacaf's decision. 'We have received a brief letter from General Secretary Philippe Moggio with a rejection of our application to join Concacaf as the 42nd member,' Kleist said in the statement. 'We will use the next 24 hours to evaluate our situation and discuss internally how we will process the decision – but for now we will state, that this is not a victory for football democracy, it does not make football accessible to everyone globally, and it shows that smaller nations are facing extreme difficulties in getting permission to play under their own flag.' Concacaf did not immediately respond to a request for comment. KAK plans to provide further details about its next steps in the coming days. But this is without a doubt a major blow to Greenland's hopes of being recognized as a member of FIFA. In February, Kleist told The Athletic that a rejection from Concacaf would be a significant setback. Had Concacaf approved Greenland's application, Greenland would be eligible to participate in the confederation's official tournaments. As it stands, Greenland will continue as a non-Concacaf and non-FIFA member, which does not allow KAK to qualify for youth or senior regional or FIFA World Cup tournaments. Kleist said that KAK did not have plans to apply to join any other confederations. In February, Kleist said that a negative response from Concacaf would force KAK to continue building relationships with the Danish and Icelandic football federations, regarding youth and senior level friendlies, because 'we don't have a chance with the UEFA.' 'The long term goal for Greenland is to be a member of FIFA, to be recognized as a football nation and to be a part of Concacaf in the sense that we play against the Caribbean Football nations and play in World (Cup) qualification matches,' Kleist said at the time. 'And I'd like clubs in Greenland to have the possibility to play against other clubs, as well. But the meeting with Concacaf is going to be a big part of that because if they're telling us just to back off and that they don't need us, it's going to be … very bad for us.' Greenland's national team head coach, Morten Rutkjær, expressed in February that joining Concacaf would give his players, and future generations in Greenland, something to play for. 'It'll give meaning to training a lot, to staying in shape,' Rutkjær said. 'Right now they have nothing to look forward to. So for us, it's very important. It's also important to be a member of Concacaf because the small children will have something to dream about, to maybe be part of the national team and play against all of those countries. There's enormous meaning for us to be a part of Concacaf.' Advertisement From a logistical and infrastructural point of view, Greenland's hopes of being accepted as a Concacaf member were a difficult sell. Greenland is the largest island in the world and it is part of North America. That status has recently led to geopolitical strains with the U.S. and the Trump administration. When Trump told reporters in January he planned to buy Greenland, and claimed that the Greenlandic people wanted to be part of the U.S., it thrust KAK's application into a political arena that it did not intend to confront. Kleist was asked if the political situation had hindered KAK's application in any way. 'It's very difficult to answer that, because I think, in some ways, it's hurting our case a little bit, because there are so many journalists in the football world asking Concacaf and us about Trump,' Kleist said in February. 'But in the big picture, I think it's good for us because everybody's talking about what's next for Greenland.' What's next for Greenland from a football perspective now is unknown. Any hope that Greenlanders had of playing official matches and potentially becoming both a Concacaf and FIFA member have been put on ice – perhaps, permanently. 'To join Concacaf, it would mean very much for me and the whole of Greenland and to Greenland's football,' national team winger Søren Kreutzmann previously told The Athletic. 'We can bring experiences and develop football all over Greenland, and many more possibilities.'

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