Tanya Kappo

Tanya Kappo (Cree) is an Indigenous rights activist. She is one of the four women who co-founded Idle No More and was briefly the manager of community relations for Canada's National Public Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

Early life and education
Kappo is from the Sturgeon Lake Cree Nation in Treaty 8 Territory and was raised on the Northwestern Alberta Reserve in Sturgeon Lake. Her father was Harold Cardinal, author of The Red Paper. She graduated the University of Manitoba with a J.D. in 2012.

Activism and career
Kappo is one of the four women who co-founded the Idle No More movement in November 2012. Kappo described the impetus for founding the movement as "the legislation facing First Nations, primarily Bill C-45". Kappo co-edited the book The Winter We Danced: Voices From the Past, the Future, and the Idle No More Movement.

Kappo was hired as the community relations for the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women in early 2017. She resigned from the inquiry in June 2017. In November, 2017, Kappo emceed the symposium, Indigenous Climate Action: An Indigenous led climate change initiative. In 2020 she was working as a lawyer in Alberta.

Electoral politics
In 2006, Kappo ran for the Liberal Party of Canada in the federal election in the riding of Peace River (Alberta). She lost to Conservative candidate Chris Warkentin.

Personal life
Kappo has three children and lives in Edmonton.