Ottawa Citizen

Ontario to create two new ridings in the north

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO • Ontario’s north is set to get two more seats in time for next year’s provincial election, one of which would be a primarily Indigenous riding.

The Liberal government will introduce legislatio­n in the fall to implement two new ridings called Kiiwetinoo­ng and Mushkegowu­k, Attorney General Yasir Naqvi announced Tuesday.

Those two new ridings — in addition to 15 others already planned across the rest of the province — would bring Ontario’s provincial total up to 124.

The government had tasked a Far North Electoral Boundaries Commission with looking at whether the region needed one or two more ridings and it said the overwhelmi­ng majority of feedback it received was that two should be created.

That means the area would include: the riding of Kiiwetinoo­ng, a majority Indigenous riding; Mushkegowu­k, a majority Francophon­e riding including the Weenusk (Peawanuck) First Nation; and Kenora-Rainy River, including Dryden, Fort Frances, Kenora and Rainy River; and Timmins.

Kiiwetinoo­ng, which is the Ojibwa word for North, will have a population of 32,987 — 68 per cent of whom are Indigenous.

Mushkegowu­k, which the commission said is roughly translated in Swampy Cree as people of the swamp land, will have a population of 30,037 — 27 per cent of whom are Indigenous and 60 per cent of whom are Francophon­e.

The commission’s final report said it believes creating the additional ridings would lead to more effective representa­tion for Ontarians living in the Far North.

“In our view, enhanced political representa­tion for Indigenous peoples in Ontario’s political system is a necessary component of the broader movement toward reconcilia­tion,” the commission wrote.

During consultati­ons, the commission heard some feedback on reluctance from many Indigenous people to participat­e in provincial politics, fearing it could come at the expense of Indigenous self-government, the report said.

ENHANCED POLITICAL REPRESENTA­TION ... IS A NECESSARY COMPONENT OF THE BROADER MOVEMENT.

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