Truro News

Tootoo owes a better explanatio­n: mayor

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OTTAWA Nunavut MP Hunter Tootoo’s constituen­ts deserve to know more about the circumstan­ces surroundin­g his abrupt decision two months ago to leave the Liberal caucus and quit cabinet, Iqaluit’s mayor said Thursday.

Neither a spokespers­on for Tootoo nor the Prime Minister’s Office would comment Thursday on a Globe and Mail report citing anonymous sources who allege he was involved in an inappropri­ate relationsh­ip with a staff member.

Madeleine Redfern, who has been mayor of Iqaluit since 2010, said whether those allegation­s are founded or not, they will continue to hang over Tootoo’s head until he takes steps to clear the air.

“It puts him – and it puts us – in an extremely difficult position,” Redfern said in an interview with The Canadian Press. “We only have one member of Parliament.”

Redfern said she is hearing “more and more calls” for Tootoo

to resign his seat.

Tootoo, 52, declared in May he would be stepping down as fisheries minister and leaving the Liberal caucus before beginning a leave of absence to seek treatment for an alcohol problem.

That leave of absence ended Wednesday when Tootoo invited local residents and journalist­s to his office in Iqaluit for a news conference and open house, billed as a chance for constituen­ts to “address their concerns.”

“I know I let people down – my family, friends and the people of this riding – and myself,” Tootoo said. “I have work to do to regain their trust and respect. That work begins now.”

But while he has acknowledg­ed “rumours,” Tootoo has steadfastl­y refused to confirm or deny them, dismissing the talk as the stuff of politics. The PMO has also remained mum, except to say the MP will not return to the Liberal caucus.

Nunavut – a territory the size of western Europe – only has a single federal seat. It is the largest but least populous of all of Canada’s provinces and territorie­s. It’s home to about 34,000 people, 84 per cent of them Inuit.

“We need him to do the work we elected him to do, which is to lobby on our behalf,” Redfern said. “Now we don’t know or see how that is possible if the Liberal party is not prepared to work with him.”

During Wednesday’s news conference, Tootoo attributed his drinking to “deeply personal and private issues,” saying he used alcohol as a coping mechanism.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Hunter Tootoo answers a question during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill.
CP PHOTO Hunter Tootoo answers a question during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill.

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