Canada election 2015: Who's running in the Yukon riding?
A look at the candidates running in Yukon in the federal election
Melissa Atkinson is the NDP candidate in Yukon.
Atkinson is a lawyer and former chair of the Yukon Human Rights Commission. She's also a member of the Tr'ondëk Hwëch'in First Nation.
Atkinson said she chose to run because she wants change. She said Yukoners want an MP who will represent their voice in Ottawa.
She has cited a number of key issues and priorities, including the repeal of Bill C-51, and a national inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women. Atkinson has also said she'll stand up for Yukon First Nations rights, supporting their stand against Bill S-6.
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Larry Bagnell is running for the Liberal Party in Yukon.
Bagnell was the territory's Liberal MP from 2000 until 2011, winning three elections before losing to Ryan Leef in 2011 by 132 votes. As MP, Bagnell served as Parliamentary Secretary to both the Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs, and the Minister of Natural Resources.
Bagnell has said a Liberal government would restore funding to Parks Canada, a department which has lost 30 jobs in Yukon since 2010. He has also spoken about restoring the relationship between government and First Nations, in part by enacting all recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
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Frank De Jong is the Green Party candidate for Yukon.
De Jong was the first leader of Ontario's provincial Green Party, a position he held from 1993 to 2009. He now lives in Faro, where he is an elementary school teacher.
De Jong has said the economy is the big issue in this election, and touts the Green Party's plan to shift taxes "off of jobs, off of sales, off of businesses, and shift those taxes onto nature."
He believes Yukon is a very "Green-leaning" riding, and hopes to build on his party's showing in the last election, when Yukon Green candidate John Streicker came third, with 19 per cent of the vote.
Ryan Leef is seeking re-election as Yukon's Conservative MP. He ran his first campaign in 2011, when he unseated Liberal MP Larry Bagnell by 132 votes, or one percentage point.
Leef grew up in Dawson City and has often referred to his "diversified career in law enforcement," which included work as a police officer.
Leef has said the economy and terrorism are key issues in this election. His party has promised to establish a military reserve unit in Yukon if re-elected, as well as a new training facility for cadets in Whitehorse, and more money for CanNor.