Long involved in politics of the Conservative Party and its predecessors, Finley first ran for public office in the
2004 federal election in the riding of
Haldimand—Norfolk. She defeated
Bob Speller, a
Liberal cabinet minister, by 1,645 votes. After being re-elected in the
2006 election, she was appointed to the cabinet as
Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development. An
Order in Council transferred authority for
Social Development Canada to her as well, and accordingly, she served under the
style Minister of Human Resources and Social Development. She was shuffled from the
Human Resources and Skills Development Canada to the
Citizenship and Immigration Canada portfolio on January 4, 2007. The following year, Finley allegedly received
threats from
sex industry officials in relation to her support of Bill C-17, which sought to allow
immigration officers to deny temporary
visas to prospective
strippers if they were suspected to be sex trafficking victims.
Tim Lambrinos of the
Adult Entertainment Association of Canada (AEAC) said that "it's not plausible" that any of the AEAC strip clubs were responsible for the threats. Finley was re-elected in the
2008 election and resumed her former post as Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development. She was re-elected in the
2011 election with 50.9% of the vote in her riding. In March 2015, a parliamentary ethics report on an affair linked to disgraced prime ministerial aide
Nigel Wright found that Finley had breached conflict of interest rules in her capacity as minister by diverting funding to a favoured project in
Markham whose promoter had close ties to the Conservative Party. After winning her seat once more in the
2015 federal election, Finley announced that she would be running for the position of interim leader of the Conservative Party, after
Stephen Harper's resignation from the post. She was passed over for interim leader and subsequently placed in Rona Ambrose's shadow cabinet. She was re-elected in the
2019 federal election. On August 23, 2020, she announced that she would not seek re-election in the
2021 federal election. She resigned from the House of Commons on May 11, 2021.
Leslyn Lewis was the Conservative candidate elected to succeed Finley in the
2021 federal election. ==Political views==