Iqaluit City Council Explained

Iqaluit City Council is the governing body of the city of Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada. As of 2022, the council consists of mayor Solomon Awa, deputy mayor Kyle Sheppard, and councillors Romeyn Stevenson (alternative deputy mayor), Simon Nattaq, Ookalik Curley, Paul Quassa, Kimberly Smith, Samuel Tilley, and Swany Amarapala.[1]

From 1964 to 1979, Frobisher Bay was led by community council and chair.[2] After 1979–1980, Frobisher Bay had a town council and mayor and since 2001 a city council and a mayor.[2]

The council is elected fully at-large, with the mayor and all eight councillors elected citywide.

2006–2009

On 10 September 2008, CBC North reported that Sheutiapik would be taking a leave of absence to run in the upcoming Nunavut election.[3] She ran in Iqaluit West, which had the highest voter turnout at 90.2% but was defeated by incumbent MLA Paul Okalik by 44 votes.[4] She subsequently returned to the mayor's chair.

2009–2012

The 2009 municipal election was held on 19 October. Elisapee Sheutiapik and former councillor, Jim Little, were both running for mayor. Sheutiapik won with 57.7% of the vote to Little's 42.3%.[5]

For council, a total of 21 people ran for the eight seats. These included incumbents Glenn Williams, Jimmy Kilabuk, David Alexander, Simon Nattaq and Claude Martel. On the day of the election Alexander was shown with 597 votes, one more than Romeyn Stevenson.[6] However a recount was held and Stevenson gained five more votes for a total of 601.[7]

Results[8]
NameTotal votes%Elected
Mary Ekho Wilman 1,002 9.7% Elected
David Ell 736 4.2% Elected
Jimmy Kilabuk 709 6.8% Elected
Simon Nattaq 709 6.8% Elected
Mary Akpalialuk 654 6.3% Elected
Mat Knicklebein 651 6.3% Elected
Natsiq Alainga-Kango 637 5.8% Elected
Romeyn Stevenson 601 5.8% Elected
David Alexander 597 4.2%
Glenn A. Williams 576 5.6%
Anthony (Tony) Rose 561 5.4%
Betty Brewster 526 2.7%
Nancy Gillis 436 6.2%
Caroline Anawak 432 5.1%
Eddie Rideout 318 3.1%
Brad Chambers 284 2.7%
David Eddie Devries 279 7.1%
Claude Martel 263 2.5%
Brian Willoughby 153 1.5%
Kathleen E. Marko 120 1.2%
Boazie Ootoova 107 1.0%

2010 by-elections

Incumbent mayor Elisapee Sheutiapik and councillor Natsiq Alainga-Kango both resigned in 2010, Sheutiapik for personal reasons and Alainga-Kango to run for the presidency of Nunavut Tunngavik.[9] A by-election on December 13, 2010, chose Madeleine Redfern to succeed Sheutiapik as mayor and Joanasie Akumalik to succeed Alainga-Kango on council.

Iqaluit municipal by-elections, 2010
Mayor
Name Vote%
Madeleine Redfern37730.26
Allen Hayward31425.20
Paul Kaludjak31425.20
Jim Little24119.34
Total Valid Ballots1246100%
Rejected ballots16
Councillor
Name Vote%
Joanasie Akumalik75860.54
Stephen Mansell33526.76
Ed Devries15912.70
Total Valid Ballots1252100%

2012 election

Iqaluit municipal election, 2012[10]
Mayor
NameTotal votes%Elected
John Graham95371%Elected
Allen Hayward20415%Not Elected
Noah Ooloonie Papatsie18414%Not Elected
Total Valid Ballots1,341100%
Rejected ballots1
Councillor
NameTotal votes%Elected
Mary Ekho Wilman1,07012.9%Elected
Romeyn Stevenson1,00012.1%Elected
Joanasie Akumalik92411.2%Elected
Kenny Bell92111.1%Elected
Jimmy Kilabuk91811.1%Elected
Simon Nattaq88010.6%Elected
Terry Dobbin8089.8%Elected
Mark Morrissey6698.1%Elected
Lewis Falkiner MacKay5957.2%Not Elected
Ranbir S. Hundal4915.9%Not Elected
Total Valid Ballots 8,276100%
Rejected ballots42

2015 election

Mayoral Candidate Vote[11] %
1,005 59.40
Mary Wilman 527 31.15
Noah Paptsie 160 9.46
Elected to council:

2019 election

Mayoral Candidate Vote[12] %
1,049 60.39
Noah Uluuni Paptsie 688 39.61
Elected to council:[13]

2023 election

Mayoral Candidate Vote[14] %
Solomon Awa 1,007 79.42
Vincent Yvon 171 13.49
Lili Weemen 90 7.10
Elected to council:

Mayors and Council Chairs

From 1964 to 1979 the settlement was headed by a chair.

Village of Frobisher Bay 1964–1980

The Chair was renamed as mayor in 1979 and Frobisher Bay became a town in 1980.

Town of Frobisher Bay 1980–1987

Town of Iqaluit 1987–2001

City status was granted in 2001.

City of Iqaluit

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: City Council . City of Iqaluit . August 27, 2023.
  2. Web site: About Iqaluit: History . City of Iqaluit. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141211185403/http://www.city.iqaluit.nu.ca/i18n/english/history.html . December 11, 2014.
  3. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nunavut-health-minister-aglukkaq-running-for-tories-1.769112 "Nunavut health minister Aglukkaq running for Tories"
  4. http://nortext.v1.myvirtualpaper.com/Nunatsiaq_News_81031/2008103001?page= "Four ministers dumped; Okalik wins squeaker"
  5. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2009/10/19/iqaluit-elex.html Sheutiapik re-elected Iqaluit mayor
  6. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2009/10/20/iqa-elex-recount.html?ref=rss&loomia_si=t0:a16:g2:r1:c0.232094:b28404639 Iqaluit election recount called
  7. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2009/10/27/iqa-elex-recount.html Alexander out after Iqaluit election recount
  8. Web site: 2009 Elections City of Iqaluit . 2008-09-26 . Google Docs/Kirt Ejesiak CRO . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081029201812/http://www.elections.nu.ca/i18n/docs/cand/cand_eng.pdf . 2008-10-29 .
  9. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2010/12/13/iqaluit-mayor-elex.html "Madeleine Redfern elected Iqaluit mayor"
  10. Web site: Iqaluit Elections 2012 Results. 2012-10-06. City of Iqaluit. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20121105024958/http://www.iqaluitelections.ca/. 2012-11-05.
  11. News: Photos: Meet Iqaluit's new mayor and council . October 19, 2015 . . April 23, 2020.
  12. Web site: General Election for Mayor: Iqaluit . Elections Nunavut . April 23, 2020 . February 29, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200229082910/https://www.elections.nu.ca/en/elections/2578/results/2372 . dead .
  13. Web site: General Election for Municipal Council: Iqaluit . Elections Nunavut . April 23, 2020 . February 29, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200229085238/https://www.elections.nu.ca/en/elections/2579/results/2372 . dead .
  14. Web site: General Election for Mayor: Iqaluit . Elections Nunavut . October 30, 2023.