Prior to
Canadian Confederation in 1867, the
Indian Department for British North America was responsible for relations between the
Crown and Indigenous peoples. A 'Superintendent-general of Indian Affairs' was in the
Cabinet of Canada from 1867 until 1936 when the
Minister of Mines and Resources became responsible for indigenous relations. In 1950, the Indian Affairs branch was transferred to the
minister of citizenship and immigration, who had responsibility for "
status Indians" until the creation of the position of minister of Indian affairs and northern development in 1966. Before 1966, the Northern Development portions of the portfolio were the responsibility of the
minister of northern affairs and national resources. A 1983 House of Commons Committee recommended that Indian or First Nations communities be allowed to write their own membership code provided that the code did not violate fundamental human rights. A second report from the 1983 Penner Committee recommended the gradual abolition of the office of minister of Indian affairs and a transfer of responsibility for their own affairs to First Nations communities. Proposed changes died on the House of Commons'
Order Paper at the end of the parliamentary session and have not been re-introduced. Until amendments to the
Indian Act in 1985 restored Indian status to many people whose status had been revoked for discriminatory reasons, about half of the persons who identified as 'Indian' were entitled to be
registered as Indians under the
Indian Act and to receive the benefits reserved for registered Indians under the Act. In 1985, status was restored to 100,000 people including women who married men who were not Status Indians, and their children; people who had, prior to 1961, renounced their Indian status so they could vote in federal elections, and their children; people whose mother and paternal grandmother did not have status before marriage (these people lost status at 21), and their children; and people who had been born out of wedlock of mothers with status and fathers without, and their children. As of July 2004, the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development has been assigned the role of
Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non-Status Indians concurrently. By 2017, CIRNAC and the
Minister of Indigenous Services were responsible for federal government relations with First Nations, Inuit and Métis. ==Acts==