- Tony Penikett
Antony (Tony) David John Penikett is a mediator and negotiator and former politician in
Yukon ,Canada . An activist with theNew Democratic Party (NDP), Penikett was campaign manager in 1972 forWally Firth , the first indigenous northern MP ever elected to the House of Commons. Penikett became a member of theNew Democratic Party 's federal council in 1973 and served as executive assistant toEd Broadbent in the mid-1970s. He was president of the federal NDP from 1981 to 1985.Born in
Sussex ,England , on November 14, 1945 and educated at St. Albans School in England and in Alberta and Ontario, Penikett began his Yukon working life as an asbestos mine labourer at Clinton Creek,Yukon , where he became active in his union as a shop steward and chair of the grievance committee. He was first elected to theYukon Legislative Assembly in 1978. As leader of theYukon New Democratic Party he went from being the sole New DemocratMember of Legislative Assembly (MLA) in 1981 to leading the party to power in the 1985 territorial election, forming aminority government and becoming government leader.Penikett fought the federal government for a better deal for the territory in
Canadian confederation and for control over its natural resources. Penikett's government also negotiated and signed an umbrella agreement forFirst Nations land claims, negotiated the first four agreements with individual First Nations, and developed an economic development strategy for the Yukon in consultation with citizens.Penikett's government opposed the
Meech Lake Accord , believing it would make it impossible for the Yukon to ever become aprovince .The NDP formed a
majority government after the 1989 election, with Penikett as Premier, the first government leader in the territory to be given that title. After seven years in power, the NDP was defeated in the 1992 election by the conservativeYukon Party .In 1994 Penikett resigned as leader of the Yukon NDP and was succeeded by
Piers McDonald .Robert Sheppard of the "Globe and Mail" commented at the time that Penikett had dominated Yukon politics for most of his 16 years in the legislature: "In that chamber, he could be the withering educator, a monument of sound reason or electrifying passion; or a mean-spirited bully." There was an attempt later that year to draft Penikett as leader of the federalNew Democratic Party , but he declined to run. In 2003, after he had moved toBritish Columbia , he was rumoured to be a candidate to lead theBritish Columbia New Democratic Party , but did not run.Penikett is now a senior fellow on native treaty issues and a visiting professor for the Undergraduate Semester in Dialogue at
Simon Fraser University . He has also worked at the Walter & Duncan Gordon Foundation, and for West Coast Environmental Law. In 1997 he was appointed by the then NDP government in British Columbia to lead contract negotiations with the province's public sector unions.Penikett is the father of the actor
Tahmoh Penikett , who plays Lt. Karl "Helo" Agathon on the television series "Battlestar Galactica". His twin daughters Sarah and Stephanie Penikett have also appeared on television, in "Psych " and "The L-Word ".Penikett is the author of "Reconciliation: First Nations Treaty Making in British Columbia"(Douglas & McIntyre, 2006); two television films, "The Mad Trapper" (BBC TV, London, 1972) and "La Patrouille Perdu" (ORTF, Paris, 1974); and several plays.
External links
* [http://www.carc.org/pubs/v16no2/6.htm 1998 interview with Penikett] "Northern Perspectives" magazine
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