Senator wonders if it’s time for a Mi’kmaq seat in Nova Scotia legislature
HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia senator says the time may be right to re-examine the establishment of a Mi’kmaq seat in the provincial legislature — and the premier says his government is open to it too.
Dan Christmas, a Mi’kmaq who was appointed to Ottawa’s Upper Chamber as a non-partisan senator last fall, said he thinks relations between the provincial government and the Mi’kmaq have improved since the idea was first brought forward in the late 1980s.
The Liberal government announced prior to the May 30 election that it had formed an independent commission to consult Acadians and African Nova Scotians on effective electoral representation and also pledged to create a separate electoral boundary commission in late January of next year.
Christmas believes the process could provide an opportunity if there is Mi’kmaq support for the idea. The Nova Scotia legislature agreed to the idea in principle decades ago.


