Nova Scotia

Former MLA who switched to PCs admits he took Liberal Party information

Former Northside-Westmount Liberal MLA Fred Tilley says he accessed Liberal Party data before he crossed the floor to the PCs, but has not used it in the provincial election campaign.

Fred Tilley says he accessed Northside-Westmount Liberal data, but has not used it in provincial campaign

Former MLA who switched to PCs admits he took Liberal Party information

14 days ago
Duration 2:18
Fred Tilley says he accessed the Northside-Westmount Liberal data, but hasn't used it in the provincial election campaign.

The Progressive Conservative candidate for the Cape Breton riding of Northside-Westmount admits he took information from the Liberals before he switched parties last month.

Fred Tilley was the Liberal MLA for the constituency, but crossed the floor to join the PCs just before Premier Tim Houston called a provincial election.

On Tuesday, Tilley told CBC's Information Morning Cape Breton that as a Liberal at the time, it was his information to take.

The data is not much different than what's available to all candidates who get a voters list, he said.

"At the end of the day, you have to look at where your support is, so in that list, it's all information that I garnered, knocking doors, making phone calls, day-to-day work in the office ... it's the work from 2021 that I did and beyond, so it's really my information."

Tilley said he has not used the information he took from the Liberal database before he left.

A man in a suit speaks at a podium as a man and a woman in suits look on. The room in Nova Scotia's Province House has a red carpet and two ornate red chairs.
Premier Tim Houston downplayed the Liberal Party's complaints after MLA Fred Tilley crossed the floor and joined the PC Caucus on Oct. 22 at Province House. (Michael Gorman/CBC)

After he switched parties, the Liberals complained to Elections Nova Scotia and the RCMP about a privacy breach of their database.

They said he "misappropriated files" that contained "sensitive and personal and proprietary information" that belonged to the party, including the names, phone numbers and addresses of about 2,500 constituents.

The party said it was sending a letter to all those affected to warn them of the privacy breach.

The Mounties have launched an investigation.

Provincial elections officials say the issue is not in their jurisdiction.

Tilley said it's just his former party trying to get revenge on him for switching parties.

"Going down this road, sending out letters to constituents, calling the RCMP, it's all ridiculous," he said.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tom Ayers

Reporter/Editor

Tom Ayers has been a reporter and editor for 38 years. He has spent the last 20 covering Cape Breton and Nova Scotia stories. You can reach him at tom.ayers@cbc.ca.

With files from Information Morning Cape Breton

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