
Frances Nunziata
Councillor Frances Nunziata's voting record reflects a Fiscal Conservative and localist, community-preservationist orientation. She consistently supports budget discipline, police, and traditional transit infrastructure. While she often aligns with the majority on procedural and infrastructural matters, she frequently dissents on progressive social policies, equity-focused measures, certain environmental regulations, and specific housing developments or planning frameworks that enable density. Her approach is selective, favoring top-down housing supply tools over neighborhood-level zoning changes, and she shows a pattern of supporting existing fiscal tools while resisting new taxes. Recent votes indicate nuanced support for some broad climate action plans, reflecting a pragmatic stance on environmental issues.
The politician consistently supports systemic initiatives to increase housing density, streamline development, and protect tenants, with a strong emphasis on missing middle housing. However, they demonstrate a more selective approach to specific zoning amendments, particularly regarding homelessness services infrastructure and certain individual development projects.
The politician generally supports initiatives aimed at increasing the efficiency and speed of public transit and integrating crisis response services into the transit system. However, they have shown selective opposition to specific transit priority projects on certain corridors.
The politician supports economic growth and urban development through the endorsement of economic action plans and the development fee review. They prioritize enhancing city service delivery and accountability, while opposing specific transparency measures targeting the mayor's office.
The Alignment Matrix
A real-time, side-by-side comparison of what this politician says publicly, who meets with them privately, and how they actually vote when the money is on the line. Categorized by AI for perfect apples-to-apples accountability.
💬 Public Rhetoric
No recent policy statements scraped from social feeds.
🚪 Closed Doors
Dillon Waldron
Procurement: Discussions regarding vendor status and procurement-related considerations
Erica Wallis
Economic Development;Garbage / Recycling;Real Estate / Property (City-owned): Oneida wishes to engage the City of Toronto on future decision-making regarding the Green Lane Landfill.
Aaron Binder
Economic Development;Transportation;Transportation - Cycling / Bicycle Lanes: - Advocating for privately owned electric scooter legalization under the Ontario Electric Scooter Pilot- Advocating for a standardized safe riding framework developed by the City in tandem with riders and industry retailers
John Corbo
Procurement: Procurement for suspended corporate entities
Tasnia Khan
Planning and Development;Planning and Development Application, Zoning By-law;Planning and Development Application, Site Plan: 25 Photography Drive
🏛️ Actual Votes
Expanding Toronto Community Crisis Response to the Toronto Transit Commission
Toronto Parking Authority 2024 Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) Report
Introducing Colour-Coded Signage for RentSafeTO
Promoting and Delivering School Based Vision Testing in Selected Toronto High Needs Schools - by Councillor James Pasternak, seconded by Councillor Lily Cheng
Notable Votes & Deviations
Expanding Toronto Community Crisis Service (police-alternative program)
Shows opposition to community safety programs that reduce police involvement, aligning with a more traditional law-and-order stance. (Vote count not available in recent data.)
Banning fossil fuel advocacy advertising on city assets
Indicates a stance against environmental regulations targeting fossil fuel industries, reflecting a conservative or industry-sympathetic approach to climate policy.
Showing Respect for Transit Customers: Implementing a Toronto Transit Commission Money-Back Guarantee
Dissented on a customer service and accountability measure for the TTC, aligning with a focus on operational control and potentially opposing perceived service guarantees.
Review of the Order Paper
Voted in favor of reviewing the order paper, but the motion was defeated, indicating procedural disagreement with the management of the council agenda.
Call to Order (2025-11-13)
Voted in favor of a call to order motion that failed on a tie, indicating procedural disagreement with the conduct of the meeting.
Showing Respect for Transit Customers: Implementing a Toronto Transit Commission Money-Back Guarantee (2025-12-17)
Voted in favor of a version of the TTC money-back guarantee that was narrowly defeated, highlighting her selective support for specific iterations of the policy but opposition to the version that ultimately passed.