Congratulations to Naheed & other fabulous people

(On a separate note, I’m giving a talk tomorrow at 3pm at UBC.)

For those who weren’t paying attention to the Calgary municipal election last night, Naheed Nenshi came out of third place and won the mayoral race. Of course, the articles are already focusing on the wrong things: he’s Muslim, his a minority, etc…

What really matters about Naheed is that he smart, he is about ideas and he’s progressive. That he’s managed to capture the imagination of a place like Calgary speaks volumes both about how hard he campaigned and how cosmopolitan Canada’s urban centres are becoming.

But back to ideas. I first met Naheed way back when he served as lead author of Building Up: Making Canada’s Cities Magnets for Talent and Engines of Development for Canada25. Essentially for as long as I’ve known him he’s cared about cities (and his passion predates my meeting him). There isn’t much more you could want from someone who is about to become your mayor. For me personally, his work became the template for me later when I worked as lead author first on Canada25’s report written at the request of the Privy Council Office and then, of course, on From Middle to Model Power.

It also speaks volumes about the types of people I had the pleasure to meet through Canada25 and watch grow over the years. Indeed, yesterday I ended up having lunch with Chris Kennedy – another Canada25 alum – who as Superintendent of Schools with the West Vancouver School District is also driven by a sense of public service and policy. Alison Loat, Executive Director of Samara, is another passionate believer in public service and public policy. I’m not sure whether to be more impressed by her own work or simply grateful for her unfailing belief and support of me and my work. And Andrew Medd, who gave me what may have become the best advice about blogging when I first started eaves.ca years ago: “Write for yourself, as though no one will read it.” (advice that actually was fact for the first while – you should only blog if you’re prepared to be alone with your thoughts). Of course there are so many I’m not mentioning like Ross Wallace, Debbie Chachra, Mike Morgan…

Watching the celebrations taking place in Calgary, all I can think of is how lucky I was to get to meet some of these people early on and how much I can’t wait to watch them going forward.

On a separate note, it is very much worth looking at MasterMaq’s election website powered by open election data from the city of Edmonton. From Naheed’s election (in which social media paid a powerful role), to the coverage through Twitter (that’s how I followed the events), social media continues to evolve and have an impact, especially at the local level.

5 thoughts on “Congratulations to Naheed & other fabulous people

  1. Nabeel Shakeel

    I agree that the portrait that is developing of Nenshi may be skewed, detracting from his policy credentials and personal charisma. But his religious beliefs are relevant; I don’t think it’s out of place to give them more than casual notice because of the implications, especially over the debate over multiculturalism nowadays. Was it COMPLETELY wrong for Obama to be hailed as the first black president? We can debate over the nature and pros/cons of the impact, but I can’t say, personally, that the religion doesn’t make a difference. And I think that applies for many, and that’s not necessarily wrong.

    Don’t get me wrong, this is not just about Muslims – I’m very happy to see a minority representative getting elected. I would be glad to change my mind if I can find a compelling argument for entirely disregarding this.

    Reply
  2. Pingback: Rob Ford, Naheed Nenshi, and the Changing Face of Canada | AndrewKurjata.ca

  3. Pingback: Naheed Nenshi – vision, experience, excitement

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