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(AV058)
April 5, 2009

In Brief:

  • Elections at the Assembly of First Nations (AFN) are comparable to mayors in Canada voting for the prime minister.
  • There is a disconnect between the concerns of individual First Nations and their national leadership. On the ground, the grassroots are concerned about band-level performance and accountability.
  • Having only chiefs vote prevents the masses have having their concerns addressed, like when band members supported the First Nations Governance Act, but their leadership did not.
  • The AFN must open up its election process by allowing individual band members to vote for national chief.


Let's Have Real Elections at the Assembly of First Nations

Imagine you wanted to be prime minister but rather than run for the leadership of your party and then face a general election, you only needed the support of every mayor in Canada.

This is the situation First Nations people find themselves in vis-à-vis the national chief of the Assembly of First Nations (AFN), the ostensible representative body for on-reserve First Nations. To become the national chief, one needs only to get a enough votes from First Nations chiefs.

This process will again play itself out in July when the AFN "elects" a national chief, this while most First Nation citizens sit on the sideline as their 600 chiefs vote in their place.

The unresponsive and unrepresentative nature of the current system becomes obvious when the differing agendas of national leaders and those on the ground are compared. Most AFN candidates, including incumbent Phil Fontaine, talk about land claims and increased autonomy, but there is a different conversation going on in Indian Country.

I have travelled to dozens of First Nation reserves over the past two years as have some of my colleagues--in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. As part of our work, we ask band members to complete surveys on community governance. We meet with hundreds of indigenous people; they tell us they are frustrated and they rightly feel disenfranchised.

We hear the angry voices of those dissatisfied with their band administration’s performance. Aboriginal Canadians tell us how they waited years for a home because of political interference from chiefs and councillors; they relay stories of how their child in college or university suddenly had their post-secondary assistance cut off by the band due to local politics.

On one reserve in northern Alberta, a woman was upset we missed her house during our survey. She told me how her band council ensured off-reserve residents were denied the right to vote in band elections.

A comparison between these stories and what is heard from the national Aboriginal leadership reveals a disconnect between the agenda they push and what those on the Aboriginal ground think is important. While the AFN occasionally raises useful issues such as residential school survivors, the AFN and average First Nations members are on different wavelengths. In fact, they might as well be on different planets. Part of the reason for that is how the current system assures the national chief will speak for institutional interests of band chiefs and not the concerns of band members.

That some chiefs may be sincere is not at issue; the system of elections just doesn't allow for a full democratic airing of concerns or priorities.

For example, this perverse system played out when the First Nations Governance Act was introduced by Jean Chretien's Liberals in 2003. That legislation would have strengthened First Nations financial accountability and improved band elections. Grassroots support for these changes was widespread as polls showed strong support from average band members.

Things changed when the AFN and band politicians intervened--including Fontaine who opposed the bill. Regrettably, many chiefs had a vested interest in the status quo and were reluctant to open up their books or improve election systems.

The AFN and band politicos wrapped themselves in "self-government" bravado and opposed change. Paul Martin, like most politicians, confused the AFN's positions and band politics with ground-zero opinion. So the accountability legislation died and the Assembly of First Nations, Fontaine and Martin were back to the money game, proposing billions to "solve" Aboriginal problems as part of the Kelowna Accord.

If grassroots First Nations were given the power to select their national chief, the AFN’s agenda would look different. For starters, candidates would have to appeal to a new constituency—the people. Also, the frustrations from the indigenous Canadians my colleagues and I meet every day could be heard. Sure, some First Nations radicals will come out of the woodwork, but it's unlikely they would receive the broad popular support needed to win.

While a one-member, one-vote system is ideal, the AFN, as well as other Aboriginal organizations that use chief-only election models could at least experiment. Some provinces have more First Nations people than others, so they could opt for a system that gives different weights to different areas to ensure regional representation.

Either way, ordinary Aboriginal Canadian must be able to choose their leadership. First Nations should reject this outdated undemocratic system and consign it to the dustbin of history.

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    Author's Picture Joseph Quesnel

    is a policy analyst at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy who focuses on aboriginal matters and property rights. Based in Lethbridge, Alberta, he is from the Sudbury region of Northern Ontario, and has Metis ancestry from Quebec. He graduated from McGill University in 2001, majoring in political science and history. He specialized in Canadian and American politics, with an emphasis on constitutional law. He is completing a master of journalism degree at Carleton University, where he is specializing in political reporting. For two years, he covered House standing committees, as well as Senate committees. His career in journalism includes several stints at community newspapers in Northern Ontario, including Sudbury and Espanola. He also completed internships at CFRA 580 AM, a talk radio station in Ottawa and the Cable Public Affairs Channel. He writes a weekly column in the Winnipeg Sun and contributes to the Taxpayer, the flagship publication of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. Quesnel's policy commentaries have appeared in the Lethbridge Herald, Vancouver Sun, Globe and Mail, Financial Post, and the National Post, among others.



    Feedback:

    • RE: Let's Have Real Elections at the Assembly of First Nations — May 25, 2009
      I read your article in the National Post entitled "This isn't democracy". Very interesting indeed. I have been talking for years about how the Assembly is governed and you are right it is totally undemocratic.It must change and for the life of me I don't know how to approach the situation. I have stated my views to many people near my home who are aboriginal, I have tried to organize off reserve natives to try and come together and form some sort of group that address some of the issues facing first nations. The problem I see is that the best interests of the "little guy" are not being served. Fontaine and company are so preoccupied with their own nest that things will never change. I find it extremely hard to get involved at any level because the the status quo is much more attractive to the chiefs than the alternative. I personally am a status Indian. I am from Killarney Ontario. You being from Sudbury probably know where that is and the close proximity to Wikewemikong. I live in Richmond B.C. now and have for some twenty years. However I still vote by mail for Chief and council and still try to keep abreast of the happenings back in Ontario. It's time aboriginals adopted a one person one vote for the assembly of first nations. Only then will it be truly representative of all. Your statement "The AFN speaks for the institutional interests of chiefs--not for ordinary band members" jumped right off the page at me and I thought, finally somebody had the guts to say that in print. Good Article. -- E-mail from Dean Beauvais, Richmond B.C.
    • RE: Let's Have Real Elections at the Assembly of First Nations — April 6, 2009
      I enjoyed the column and indeed have written editorials concerning this subject in the past. I agree there should be a more representative system in place for First Nations concerning the election of a AFN National Grand Chief. Did not the United States come into being because of taxation without representation? At times we feel there is representation without representation. Of great concern too is the acknowledgement of the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples by the Canadian Government through the Harper administration. In this case off-reserve First Nations are represented by a National Chief that is in no way is voted upon either by themselves or even a elected representative representing them. Support and funding for this organization could be better spent on cash strapped Native Friendship Centres across Canada who actually deliver services to off-reserve Aboriginal Peoples. However, politics play a part even in the national venues much the same as on First Nations reserves. Hopefully we will change national, regional and local political systems as too be more representative of First Nations Peoples. -- E-mail from Will Nicholls, Editor in Chief of the Nation


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