Over the weekend, I tried to contact all candidates running in the Inverness and Antigonish byelections to ask them their opinions on whether MLAs should be recording their votes in the House, and if they were elected would they push for recorded votes. Here are the results:
Ian McNeil (Liberal-Inverness):
“…on the recording of votes in the legislature: as someone who was involved in journalism I believe transparency is paramount in making those decisions and I would do everything I can to forward that.”
“…I think every vote should be recorded. I think everything we do is on the record. I have a deeply engrained understanding of what on the record and off the record means as a jouranlist, and I support that kind of transparency.”
Allan MacMaster (PC-Inverness):
“I’m not afraid of it.”
“I don’t like making commitments like that before an election.”
Nathalie Arsenault (Green-Inverness):
“I think it is a good idea. I think it is more transparent, more democratic. Obviously if the entire riding has voted in a particular individual they want to make sure that they are voting in their interests, and they need to be held accountable.”
“Yes, I would”
Miles Tompkins (Liberal – Antigonish)
“It sounds good. I don’t know if the votes are probably determined in caucus before they are in the House.”
“I think you’d have a hard time with that with the way party politics works.”
“I know it’s sad, but democracy is not perfect.”
“To be honest, I don’t think I could make that promise and I’m sorry for that.”
Darren Thomson (PC-Antigonish)
“I have no problem supporting that. After all, everything that we do is for the people of Antigonish.”
“Yes, I don’t have a problem with that. I’d have to learn about the procedure of the Legislature anyway so I don’t see why I couldn’t.”
(NDP candidates Bert Lewis (Inverness) and Maurice Smith (Antigonish) could not be reached for comment)