Mi’kmaq power, inside and beyond Ottawa, stronger than in past fishery battles
HALIFAX — When Jaime Battiste was in his early 20s, cable news channels were full of images of Mi’kmaq fishermen in New Brunswick battling federal fisheries officers over seized lobster traps.
Now, Canada’s first Mi’kmaq MP is on the inside of federal power, trying to help as the launch of an Indigenous lobster fishery in St. Marys Bay in Nova Scotia meets fierce resistance.
“I wonder if they ever thought, 20 years ago, that they’d have two Mi’kmaq senators and a Mi’kmaq MP who could help influence and work with government to find a solution,” the Liberal MP said in a recent interview from his Cape Breton riding.
His role is seen by some observers as one sign Mi’kmaq political influence is gradually growing, when compared to the clashes off Burnt Church, N.B., in Miramichi Bay, between 1999 and 2002.