Ottawa Citizen

First-time candidates share their priorities

Two first-time candidates explain how they started and why they're running

- TAYLOR BLEWETT tblewett@postmedia.com

Gustave Roy's political debut has been a long time coming.

He grew up steeped in current affairs, with a paper route that made front-page news part of his daily routine, and CBC Radio embedded in the soundtrack of his family home.

By high school, he was thinking about running for political office someday. “It's … a bit of a calling,” he explained, entirely earnest, between driveways in the Stittsvill­e neighbourh­ood where he was knocking on doors, introducin­g himself to Carleton voters as their local Liberal candidate.

Despite his long-standing desire to jump into the political arena, Roy, 47, said he wanted to wait until he had the experience and background to be successful.

He had a worldly upbringing, from Sherbrooke, Que., to Rwanda in east-central Africa, where he saw his father, a mechanical engineerin­g professor, training Rwandese students and his stay-at-home mom volunteeri­ng in local schools.

His own career progressed in the private sector, in finance and the pharmaceut­ical industry. Roy is the youngest of six children, all of whom have been successful, he said, and giving back is a strong family value.

“So I just feel that it's time for me to sort of pay it forward,” Roy said of his decision to run.

Roy is one of two newcomers to federal politics the Citizen accompanie­d as they canvassed in their ridings. The intent was to profile a first-time candidate from each of the big three parties, but none of the six local Conservati­ves who fit the bill were made available to participat­e.

`WE NEED THOSE VOICES'

A pivotal moment in Huda Mukbil's path to politics was an inquiry, from a university professor, about the languages she spoke.

Born in Ethiopia, her family fled civil war in that country when Mukbil was four. They lived in Cairo, then immigrated to Montreal and moved to Ottawa in 1991, the same year they got citizenshi­p. Mukbil went to Ridgemont High School in Ottawa South, the riding she's now running to represent as an NDP member of Parliament.

Mukbil studied law at Carleton University, and had thoughts of becoming a police officer or a lawyer. But the professor who learned about her ability to communicat­e in English, French, Arabic and Harari, an Ethiopian dialect, suggested national security as a career option.

She spent nearly 16 years at the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service, and while it was a “great career,” Mukbil has spoken publicly about her struggle for equity at an institutio­n she found lacking in it, culminatin­g in a since-settled lawsuit against CSIS with several other employees, alleging harassment and discrimina­tion.

Mukbil said she started thinking deeply about the presence and responsibi­lities given to Black women in politics. She looked at the Status of Women Committee, and didn't see them represente­d. She spoke to Celina Caesar-Chavannes, a Black Liberal MP who left caucus and elected office, disillusio­ned. She thought about Indigenous women, such as Nunavut MP Mumilaaq Qaqqaq and Vancouver- Granville's Jody Wilson-Raybould, who've just recently walked away from the House of Commons.

“So women … and especially racialized women, are finding it difficult in these places of power. And that's problemati­c,” Mukbil said. “We need that representa­tion. We need those voices.”

Now, she's trying to add her own.

GROWING MOMENTUM IN CARLETON

Roy started moving on his political aspiration two elections ago, reaching out to local MPs and gathering informatio­n from the Liberal Party about what it would take to run.

Finding a riding without a Liberal incumbent narrowed the field in the local area (of the 13 Ottawa-Gatineau ridings, all but one elected Liberals in 2019 and nine of the 12 are running again). Other practicali­ties were considered in his talks with the party, such as distance — Roy lives in Gloucester — and political infrastruc­ture at the riding level. Carleton's Liberal riding associatio­n is well-organized and committed, Roy said, with lots of volunteers, and years of work put into building their local presence.

“And I really felt that the momentum was also growing in Carleton, for the Liberals. So for me, it was just the perfect place to advocate for my values.”

Roy, who bested competitor­s to secure the Liberal nomination, sees the riding as a place where he can make a difference.

As a longtime follower of politics, he was already familiar with Carleton Conservati­ve incumbent Pierre Poilievre, who is probably the best-known Tory in local politics. A powerful but polarizing figure, with a commanding ground game and social media presence, Poilievre has been a member of Parliament in the area since 2004.

“I think the riding of Carleton deserves somebody who's maybe a little bit more positive, that's more collaborat­ive. And that's what I intend to bring to the table,” Roy said.

As for the fact that he doesn't live there, Roy said it hasn't been an issue thus far.

Something he raises on every doorstep is his belief that the economy and environmen­t go hand in hand — a Liberal talking point, but one he thinks is important to share, a year and a half into the pandemic's upending of society.

“People want to know … what our future's going to look like.”

What this vision would mean for Carleton is the extension of light rail transit, and taking a climate-friendly approach to needed infrastruc­ture, such as electric buses or a new net-zero community centre, Roy said. Rolling out affordable child care is also at the top of Roy's priority list (the Liberals have pledged $10-a-day child care within five years if re-elected).

“Every conversati­on is meaningful to me and I take it all in,” he said while door-knocking. At night, Roy said, he thinks over the dialogue he's had with people throughout the day.

“And that does influence the way I think, and my position.”

DIVERSITY IN OTTAWA SOUTH

It looked like Mukbil was going to have to face off against Morgan Gay, the Ottawa South NDP candidate in the last federal election, for the 2021 nomination.

Gay took 16 per cent of the Ottawa South vote in 2019, behind Conservati­ve candidate Eli Tannis's 24.5 per cent, and Liberal incumbent David McGuinty's 52.3 per cent. Both men are running again, with McGuinty aiming for his sixth consecutiv­e re-election.

The two aspiring NDP candidates met up, and “And right away he was like, `You know what, Ottawa South is a really diverse community. I think you're going to do really well representi­ng us. And so I'm going to step aside,'” Mukbil said of her conversati­on with Gay.

It was “amazing,” Mukbil said. “That's the party. And I'm very proud to be standing with them.”

Mukbil lives outside the riding 's boundaries, in Findlay Creek, with her husband and four children. But Ottawa South has been her home in the past and she's there all the time, Mukbil said; her parents and the mosque she attends are in the riding.

Her candidacy may prove to be a strategica­lly savvy move for the NDP in Ottawa South, a diverse electoral district with a significan­t number of Arabic-speaking voters.

Mukbil, whose family background is Arab, from Yemen, as well as east African, said she feels her roots allow her to bring together different communitie­s in the riding.

“That connection and that ability to communicat­e in all of these languages is helping to get more people to support us, and to … be involved in politics and to see themselves reflected in the system. I think that's a really important and powerful thing.”

Affordable-housing issues such as the redevelopm­ent of Heron Gate, reform of the Employment Equity Act and the stripping of charitable status from Muslim organizati­ons, which a civil-rights group said the CRA has unfairly targeted for audits, have all been on Mukbil's radar.

And then there are the hallmark NDP platform pledges, such as pharmacare, dental coverage, and lowering cellphone and internet bills. Initiative­s like these would be tremendous­ly helpful for people with low incomes, Mukbil said. The median household income in Ottawa South is $71,314, compared to $86,451 in the city at large.

Mukbil's husband, Ali Elbeddini, is a pharmacist — and a dedicated member of her campaign team — who said he sees customers come in who can't afford medication. He does what he can, but some products don't have lower-cost substitute­s.

“We need a candidate that understand­s those challenges, and works with people to find solutions for it.”

Elbeddini contrasted that with politician­s who show up during an election, put in a few minutes at the mosque, or synagogue, or church, and then disappear. Talk alone isn't enough, he said. “We need to see actions.”

Every conversati­on is meaningful to me and I take it all in. And that does influence the way I think, and my position.

 ??  ?? As he knocks on doors, Gustave Roy, who is running for the Liberals in Carleton, is bringing the message that issues involving the economy are linked to the environmen­t.
As he knocks on doors, Gustave Roy, who is running for the Liberals in Carleton, is bringing the message that issues involving the economy are linked to the environmen­t.
 ?? PHOTOS: ERROL MCGIHON ?? Huda Mukbil is running for the NDP in Ottawa South, focusing on the issues of affordable housing, pharmacare and lowering cell and internet bills.
PHOTOS: ERROL MCGIHON Huda Mukbil is running for the NDP in Ottawa South, focusing on the issues of affordable housing, pharmacare and lowering cell and internet bills.

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