Liberal Michael McLeod declares victory in tight N.W.T. election

'It's close but we feel the difference is big enough for us to be able to call it confidently,' Liberal incumbent Michael McLeod said shortly after midnight. (Michael McLeod/Twitter - image credit)
'It's close but we feel the difference is big enough for us to be able to call it confidently,' Liberal incumbent Michael McLeod said shortly after midnight. (Michael McLeod/Twitter - image credit)

Liberal incumbent Michael McLeod waited late into the night before deciding he'd won re-election.

"It's close but we feel the difference is big enough for us to be able to call it confidently," he said at a small gathering in Yellowknife.

McLeod led in the polls throughout Monday's election night, but hesitated to declare a win without a concession from the NDP's Kelvin Kotchilea.

CBC could not immediately reach Kotchilea for comment.

  • Tune in to The Trailbreaker Tuesday morning for updates

The CBC called the election for McLeod shortly after 1 a.m. Tuesday. By then, McLeod had 38 per cent of the vote followed by Kotchilea with 33 per cent. That left McLeod with a narrow 699-vote lead, though official results won't be confirmed until mail-in ballots are added to the tally.

Mario De Ciccio/CBC
Mario De Ciccio/CBC

"We were hoping that we would have a majority," McLeod said, speaking to media, and few others, in a Yellowknife hotel. "If we ever needed a new mandate, it's now during a pandemic."

But, he added, "I'm hoping that we will be able to move forward [with] the many issues that are in our platform."

The Conservative's Lea Mollison came a distant third with 14 per cent of the vote.

Independent Jane Groenewegen took 13 per cent while the Green's Roland Laufer won three per cent.

The territory had about 30,000 people on the voters list, according to Leanne Tait, Elections Canada's returning officer for the N.W.T.

About 3,400 voted in advanced polls and approximately 1,300 requested mail-in ballots, she said.

The standings on late Monday were a slight shakeup from 2019, when the Liberals won 40 per cent, followed by 26 per cent for the Conservatives and 22 per cent for the NDP.

This year, the Conservative's put up a candidate who lives in Thunder Bay, Ont., and said she had never visited the N.W.T.

Mary Powder/CBC
Mary Powder/CBC

Low key campaign

The N.W.T.'s election campaign was low key, with candidates barred from travel to several communities as the territory battled its worst outbreak of COVID-19 to date. Travel in and out of Yellowknife is still not recommended by the territory's chief public health officer, and two nearby communities are under local containment orders.

Some voters in remote communities across the Northwest Territories told CBC they were burnt out when it comes to federal politics. Others said it's time for some urgent and meaningful change.

Still others were dismayed to learn that those self-isolating due to COVID-19 or suspected COVID-19 on Sept. 20 would not be able to visit a polling station to cast a vote.