Gull-Masty reflects on first months of job Indigenous leaders were wary of her taking
OTTAWA — When Mandy Gull-Masty took up the role of Indigenous services minister last spring, one question loomed over her appointment: why would a Cree woman want to administer the Indian Act, when another First Nations woman before her turned down the role?
Gull-Masty was named to the cabinet job in May after being elected as a member of Parliament for the first time in April. She told The Canadian Press she was willing “to take the risk” even as some said the government was “setting (her) up for failure.”
Others, she said, pointed to a pathway she can help create for the people she once worked alongside, and make progress on the files she knows intimately: clean drinking water, housing and child welfare.
“I’ve had the opportunity to learn more — way more — than I ever expected. I’ve also had to push back in my own way,” said Gull-Masty from her downtown Ottawa office.


