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The Daily Record

Accountability journalism the $600M government-subsidized media won't tell you.

“Useful for Votes”? Carney Owes MPs an Accountability Ledger

The fairest response to a hot-mic controversy is not outrage. It is receipts: attendance, free votes, committee independence and a clear record of how MPs are treated.

Editorial cartoon showing Mark Carney near a hot mic while MPs are reduced to vote tokens and taxpayers demand a parliamentary accountability ledger

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s June 22 meeting with Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenković should have been a routine diplomatic photo opportunity. The Prime Minister’s Office says the leaders discussed trade, defence, critical minerals, energy and support for Ukraine. CPAC also posted video of the Parliament Hill remarks before the meeting.

Instead, the clip now circulating in conservative media is about a hot mic. Juno News and the Western Standard reported that Carney could be heard saying MPs are “useful for votes.” The Deep Dive reviewed the clip and reached a more cautious conclusion: the words do appear to be “useful for votes,” but the surrounding exchange may have been about differences between parliamentary systems, not necessarily a direct insult aimed at Canadian MPs.

The accountability test: do not build a whole case on one clipped line. Use the line to demand measurable proof that MPs are more than vote inventory for the PMO.

That distinction matters. Conservatives do not need to overstate the clip to make the democratic point. In a healthy Parliament, MPs are not props, placeholders or human buttons for the government whip. They are elected representatives. Their job is to scrutinize ministers, amend bills, defend local constituents and sometimes tell their own leadership no.

The Carney government has already invited scrutiny on that front. Critics have questioned the prime minister’s limited Question Period presence, the speed of major legislation and the government’s reliance on caucus discipline to manage a formerly minority Parliament. If Carney wants Canadians to believe MPs matter between elections, he can prove it without another speech.

Publish a parliamentary accountability ledger. Start with the prime minister’s Question Period attendance by sitting week. Add a list of whipped and free votes. Disclose how often government MPs were allowed to support opposition amendments in committee. Identify major bills that were time-limited, bundled or rushed. Where floor-crossing MPs received roles, parliamentary secretary posts, committee influence or other benefits, publish the dates and terms.

None of that requires accepting the harshest interpretation of a hot-mic moment. It simply recognizes that the quote landed because it sounded too close to how Ottawa already behaves. The modern PMO centralizes message, scheduling, votes and committee strategy. Backbenchers are praised as local champions during campaigns, then too often treated as lobby-fodder once the House sits.

If Carney believes MPs are more than “useful for votes,” the answer is easy: show Canadians where they were useful for scrutiny, amendments, dissent and accountability. Publish the ledger.

Sources

This article treats the clip as a transparency prompt, not as proof of unlawful conduct or a complete statement of intent. The accountability demand is for public, auditable parliamentary records.