History made in Canada: First Muslim Mayor elected in a major Canadian City


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Vandematram   
Member since: Nov 08
Posts: 1448
Location: Sunny - Leone

Post ID: #PID Posted on: 19-10-10 19:02:37

Come on Mississauga you can also do it.

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http://ca.yahoo.com/?fr=fptb-cclean

Calgary chooses Naheed Nenshi for mayor

1 hour, 18 minutes ago


By Kelly Cryderman, Jason Markusoff and Richard Cuthbertson


CALGARY - Political newcomer Naheed Nenshi won a dramatic see-saw battle to become Calgary's mayor Monday night, capping a stunning rise that saw the business professor climb from the pack's fringes to the city's top job.


Nenshi, 38, originally considered a long shot, defeated longtime alderman Ric McIver and former TV anchor Barb Higgins in a race that attracted voters in droves.


By midnight, Nenshi had opened a lead of more than 21,000 votes over second-place McIver, capturing about 39 per cent of the popular vote, compared with McIver at 32 per cent and Higgins at 26 per cent.


A son of immigrants who graduated from the prestigious American university of Harvard, Nenshi is Calgary's first visible minority mayor. He has also become the first leader of Muslim faith to head a major Canadian city.


Nenshi addressed jubilant supporters moments after Higgins and McIver conceded.


"Today, Calgary is a different place than it was yesterday," Nenshi said late Monday.


"It's a better place."


Political observers were stunned by his meteoric rise.


"It's a Cinderella story," said Lori Williams, a political scientist at Mount Royal University. "A lot of people thought he was too different . . . I think, though, that this reflects the diversity of the city."


In a concession speech, an emotional McIver -- the early front-runner -- acknowledged he was heartbroken.


"I'm blown away," he told his supporters. "I'm disappointed, but you should all be proud of yourselves."


McIver urged his supporters and all Calgarians to wish Nenshi well, as did Higgins.


"Elections are about choices and I celebrate and wish Mr. Naheed Nenshi the best as he moves our city forward," Higgins said.


Nenshi's win, however, appeared to touch a nerve for one Calgary Tory MLA.


"Nenshi . . . BIG mistake Calgary!" provincial Conservative politician Kyle Fawcett Tweeted.


But Premier Ed Stelmach called Calgary's new mayor late Monday to congratulate him.


"Premier, you are the first person to call me your worship," Nenshi told Stelmach over the phone.

As the winner, Nenshi will usher in a new era for city council amid tumultuous economic times.

Calgary will have its first new mayor in nine years, replacing the retiring Dave Bronconnier. Fresh faces will also occupy at least five of the 14 aldermanic seats, with incumbent Linda Fox-Mellway losing to newcomer Peter Demong.

Nenshi's passionate volunteers, many with tears in their eyes, hugged and shouted on as early poll results favoured their candidate.

"I'm feeling very proud," his mother Noorjah declared.

Heading into the municipal vote, opinion polls indicated the contest for mayor was neck and neck between McIver, Higgins, and Nenshi. They were the front-runners among a packed field of 15 candidates vying in the first open race for mayor since Bronconnier won the position in 2001.

Bronconnier, who hands over the reins next week, announced in February he wouldn't seek a fourth term.

This mayoral contest proved to be a battle of opposites: the veteran alderman versus two political newcomers.

With a $60-million projected revenue shortfall facing Alberta's largest city, McIver -- who served on council for nine years -- had argued Calgarians needed a boss with political experience.

Nenshi and Higgins, political rookies, painted McIver as part of the old guard, contending it was time for an outsider, a mayor with fresh eyes and new ideas.

Nenshi, a Mount Royal University business professor, portrayed himself as unsullied by the political game while holding a firm understanding of the ins and outs of city hall.

His popularity grew over the span of the four-week campaign, and emerged as a serious threat to McIver and Higgins in the final stretch.

At Nenshi's headquarters in the basement of a building on Macleod Trail, his "Purple Revolution" theme echoed everywhere Monday night.

People were decked out with purple feather boas, and supporters cheered loudly with every positive result as he moved into the lead.

"Today is a great day for democracy," campaign director Chima Nkemdirim said.

A source of Nenshi's momentum came from social media. He attracted young and urban voters -- and obviously many others -- with his prolific Tweeting and online posts.

He didn't have the largest campaign war chest, but his campaign drew more than 800 volunteers and 10,000 Facebook friends.

"He appeals across the political spectrum," said volunteer Richard Einarson.

"There's so many people who've said, 'I've never voted before -- I've never been excited to vote before.' "

Former oilpatch executive Wayne Stewart, who bowed out of the race for mayor last week and endorsed Nenshi, visited the Nenshi headquarters around 8:45 p.m. He said the campaign has changed politics in Calgary forever.

"He represents the future," Stewart said, noting that Nenshi represents a young, more diverse growing part of Calgary.

"He's asked me to be his mentor. And I intend to do that."

About a month ago, Nenshi sat well back in public opinion polls. However, his stunning rise in the past week forced McIver, a former meat salesman, to ditch plans to focus on an anti-Higgins attack.

With Bronconnier out of the race, McIver was widely perceived as the default front-runner. He remained so for months, until CTV anchor Higgins, 48, quit her job in July to enter an already-crowded contest. Her widespread name recognition helped vault her onto the leaderboard instantly.

McIver argued both Higgins and Nenshi lacked the experience necessary for the massive job of overseeing city hall, its $2.6-billion annual operating budget, and billions of dollars more in infrastructure projects.

During the campaign, Higgins branded herself as a fiscal conservative with a social heart. Although a city hall outsider, she has strong ties to the Calgary establishment, with a long history of chairing major charity campaigns.

For Calgary voters, Nenshi's message resonated the loudest. He sold himself as the non-establishment candidate who would clean up city hall and begin a dialogue with Calgarians.

"The great gift of this campaign is the movement that we started," Nenshi said. "The Purple Army was never about winning an election. It was about revitalizing the public conversation in this city."


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Sunny Leone a true Canadian DESI now back in India !.


Vandematram   
Member since: Nov 08
Posts: 1448
Location: Sunny - Leone

Post ID: #PID Posted on: 19-10-10 19:08:19

Another day of history being made in Mississauga.

In a major school on the south side located slightly off Hurontario Street, many a muslim girl students have submitted a signed petition asking for permission that a room be allocated on school campus for offering their daily prayers - Namaaz after school.

Many a girls have signed this petition which has been submitted to the school management as they said that they are not able to pray at home after they go home after school and hence have petitioned the school to allocate a prayer room so that they can offer prayers there before they go home.


Multiculturalism at Work.




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Sunny Leone a true Canadian DESI now back in India !.


ayaz99   
Member since: Nov 04
Posts: 33
Location: AB, CA

Post ID: #PID Posted on: 19-10-10 20:02:13

Do you think he is elected based soley on his religion? I think, there is much more in the story other than his religion--- a desi immigrant like us, harvard graduate, visionary, business professory, leader etc etc, the way media like to put it.-- I saw number of threads on multiculturlism in this forum, how do you guage multiculturlism, it is a classic example, happens only in North America :cheers:



Nightmare   
Member since: Apr 06
Posts: 1170
Location:

Post ID: #PID Posted on: 19-10-10 21:18:31

Quote:
Originally posted by mcg7

Quote:
Originally posted by Vandematram

Another day of history being made in Mississauga.

In a major school on the south side located slightly off Hurontario Street, many a muslim girl students have submitted a signed petition asking for permission that a room be allocated on school campus for offering their daily prayers - Namaaz after school.

Many a girls have signed this petition which has been submitted to the school management as they said that they are not able to pray at home after they go home after school and hence have petitioned the school to allocate a prayer room so that they can offer prayers there before they go home.


Multiculturalism at Work.






soon they will demand Burqa and a mosque inside scho0l
canada going on path of UK and france:(


I agree that Canada is going U.K., India and France way. It also signals changing demography of Canada in major cities. I am sure that idiot Desis settled in Calgary would have overwhelmingly voted for this guy as they do in West Toronto. Nobody would have paused and asked politically incorrect question as to his views about radical Islam and whether he unequivocally condemns those views. It is a plain and simple question that should have been and must be asked. It is funny that Desis of Toronto West who elect Islamist then complain about Galloway and other radicals who flock the country!

I am not surprised that the Girls in Mississagua ask for prayer hall. May be they can not watch nice TV programs and in that case they should be provided with a theater and if they can not concentrate on studies , they should be provided with extra tuition and if they can not find job, should be provided with a job also. That is what India does and soon Canada would have to follow. Nice beginning by Calgary. Let us hope and pray that the purple revolution turn Green and spreads across the American continent





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