Denis Coderre says he will reveal jobs he held in the private sector if he's elected - Action News
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Montreal

Denis Coderre says he will reveal jobs he held in the private sector if he's elected

Denis Coderre refuses to disclose his financial activities of the past four years, citing confidentiality agreements.

Valrie Plante urges Coderre to disclose finances as she releases her tax returns

Denis Coderre is refusing to disclose his business activities in the past four years unless he is elected. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Montreal mayoral candidate Denis Coderre says he has noplans to disclose his financial activities since he left city hall, but will offer detailsif he is elected on Nov. 7.

"If I'm named to X board of directors, you sign a confidentiality agreement for commercial reasons and competition. That's it," he saidSunday on Radio-Canada's Tout le monde en parle. "Yes, I earned more than when I was mayor."

On Saturday, Radio-Canada reported that Coderre, the leader ofEnsemble Montral and mayor from 2013-2017, didn't want to answer questions concerning contracts he received in the last four years, nor his financial interests in the private sector.

The municipal council code of ethics stipulates that elected officials must share "pecuniary interests" they currently have for buildings, legal persons, companies and businesses likely to have contracts with the city or with any municipal body for which they take part, within 60 days of the election.

The disclosure must include the jobs and positions the elected official occupies as a member of a board of directors.

Valrie Plante shares her tax returns

Following Coderre's refusal to share his financial activities,Valrie Plante made her tax returns for the last four years available to the media, which she says is an initiative that reflects her team's "integrity and its freedom from conflict of interests."

Projet Montral leader Valrie Plante has made her tax returns available to interested media. (Radio-Canada)

Plante invited other mayoral candidates to follow suit. Radio-Canada had asked Mouvement Montreal party leader, Balarama Holness, but he refused to reveal his income, while the head of Montreal 2021, Luc Mnard, complied.

In the last municipal elections in Montreal in 2017, Coderre and Planteunveiled their tax returns before election day.

Robert Beaudry, a candidate for Projet Montral in the district of Saint-Jacques, said Coderre should answer questions before the election about his business relationships, arguing they could have an important impact on projects that solicit public funds.

based on a report by Radio-Canada's Valrie Boisclair