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Liberal MP Hunter Tootoo Left Caucus, Cabinet Of His Own Accord, Says Justin Trudeau

The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2016 01:15 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says it was Hunter Tootoo's own decision to leave the Liberal caucus and resign from cabinet to deal with "addiction issues."
     
    In a brief statement delivered this morning outside the Liberal caucus meeting, Trudeau acknowledged the challenge faced by the Nunavut MP.  
     
    "This was his own choice after a very difficult situation," Trudeau said. "We'll have nothing further to say on this matter."
     
    The prime minister took no questions.
     
    Tootoo, the first northerner to take on the role of fisheries minister, issued a brief statement Tuesday saying he was stepping down in order not to distract from the important work of his colleagues.
     
    Tootoo said he has "decided to seek treatment for addiction issues" and asked for "privacy at this time."
     
    Tootoo isn't the first Liberal MP in this government to seek help for addiction problems: in January, rookie Newfoundland MP Seamus O'Regan announced he was back to work after getting help for a drinking problem.
     
    The announcement about Tootoo's troubles drew words of support from former Ontario premier Bob Rae, who tweeted: "Wish him well in his battle."
     
    Rona Ambrose, the interim Conservative leader, was sympathetic.
     
    "I guess I would just say I hope he gets the help that he needs and gets healthy," she said.
     
    And Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler also took to Twitter to offer support for Tootoo on behalf of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation in northern Ontario: "sending prayers and support to Hunter Tootoo as he seeks healing."
     
    Perry Bellegarde, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, said it's important for the sake of Canada's Aboriginal Peoples that Tootoo gets the help he needs and returns to Ottawa ready to work.
     
     
    "(It's) a complete shock to a lot of people, but if a person needs help, I just encourage Hunter to go and seek that help and hopefully he's welcome back to the table, because he's done a lot of good work so far," Bellegarde said Wednesday after a speech in Winnipeg.
     
    "We would hope once he's done his healing journey, he's welcome back and he's a strong force around that cabinet table. I wish him well on his healing journey."
     
    Tootoo was born in Rankin Inlet in 1963 and immediately had to fight for his life.
     
    "I was medevaced (airlifted) out," Tootoo told The Canadian Press in an interview last year. "I was in an incubator for the first three months of my life, so I am told."
     
    He went on to live in various parts of Canada, including Quebec, Ontario, Alberta and Saskatchewan before making his way back to the North in the early 1990s.
     
    The 52-year-old was first elected as a member of the Nunavut legislature for Iqaluit Centre in 1999, where he served for 14 years and was Speaker until 2013. He also held a number of cabinet positions in the territorial government.
     
    In November, a month after Tootoo defeated former Conservative cabinet minister Leona Aglukkaq to claim the federal riding of Nunavut, he said in an interview he hoped to transfer his political experience to a national scale.
     
    Tootoo is related to NHL player Jordin Tootoo, a forward for the New Jersey Devils.

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