Canada | Opinion | Politics

Erik Stegman: Lessons from Canada for the Native vote in 2016






Assembly of First Nations Chief Perry Bellegarde votes in Canada's federal election on October 19, 2015. Photo from Facebook

Pointing to a successful election cycle in Canada where Native issues were a key part of the Liberal Party platform, Erik Stegman, Assiniboine from the Carry the Kettle First Nation, calls on tribes and politicians in the U.S. to focus on health, voting rights and Native youth for the 2016 campaign:
The differences in health, education, and well-being between Native and non-Native people on both sides of the border are stark. Last month, the Assembly of First Nations—the largest national organization representing First Nation citizens in Canada—released their priorities for the federal election. National Chief Perry Bellegarde opens the new agenda with a call to action:

“Closing the gap in the quality of life between First Nations and Canada builds a stronger, healthier country for all of us. We need change now—we must close the gap.”

The gap is indeed wide—but not just in Canada. Half of First Nations children live in poverty, a figure that is triple the national average. Here in the US, 47 percent of children on reservations live in poverty, compared to the US rate of 21.1 percent. Secondary school graduation rates are 35 percent for First Nation students, compared to 85 percent for all Canadians. Here, Native students have a graduation rate lower than any other racial and ethnic group at 68 percent. The graduation rate for students served by the Bureau of Indian Education is only 53 percent, compared to the national graduation rate of 80 percent. Perhaps most troubling is the crisis of youth suicide on both sides of the border. First Nations youth in Canada commit suicide at five to six times the rate of non-aboriginal youth, and the Native Youth suicide rate in the US is two-and-a-half times the national rate.

Not only should our candidates in the US have clear platforms for improving the education, welfare, and health of tribes, but they should focus on closing some of the widest and most extreme gaps in outcomes between Native people and the rest of the population.

Each of the leading progressive parties in Canada had clear platforms for First Nations and policy commitments that targeted these gaps. The new Liberal government has committed to increasing funding for K-12 First Nations education by $2.6 billion.

Get the Story:
Erik Stegman: First Nations and the Canadian Election: 3 Takeaways for Native Americans in the US (Talk Poverty 10/22)

Related Stories:
Carly McIntosh: Justin Trudeau campaigns on change in Canada (10/26)
Mark Trahant: Indian Country can learn from vote in Canada (10/21)

Join the Conversation