Reid describes himself as more
libertarian than
conservative, and holds a combination of
civil libertarian and
socially conservative views. In 2001 he published an article in
Policy Options arguing that the federal government should turn over to individual provinces the power to decide whether marijuana would be made legal within their own boundaries. (Reid noted that this was how Canada had dealt with the issue of alcohol prohibition a century earlier, and maintained that this approach "would be the most effective method of reflecting in Canadian law our culturally based, and therefore evolving, views towards drugs.") On November 27, 2017, Reid was the only MP to break party ranks and vote in support of C-45, a bill that would eventually legalize cannabis. In 2001, he was one of four Canadian Alliance MPs to break party ranks and vote against the Chrétien government's
Anti-Terrorism Act, arguing that it violated traditional civil liberties and should be time-limited by a "Sunset Clause". Reid opposes both
capital punishment and
abortion, but has voted on such issues based on the preferences of his constituents, rather than on the basis of his own views. Reid voted against the Martin government's
same-sex marriage legislation in 2005, after consulting his constituents on the issue (although he also argued that the bill infringed upon religious rights).
Human rights During his first two terms as an MP, Reid became closely associated with efforts to end the persecution of
Falun Gong practitioners in the
People's Republic of China. A motion (M-236) drafted by Reid, which called upon Prime Minister
Jean Chrétien to raise the issue of thirteen imprisoned Falun Gong practitioners with close family ties to Canada, was unanimously adopted by the House of Commons on October 24, 2002. This action has been credited with causing the release of some of the prisoners and their subsequent emigration to Canada. Despite Reid's efforts, the Canadian immigration department declined to admit Mingli Lin, a prisoner who was named in Motion M-236, and Lin was re-arrested in 2005. Between 2007 and 2015, Reid chaired the International Human Rights subcommittee of the House
Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs. Reid chaired the steering committee of the
Canadian Parliamentary Coalition to Combat Antisemitism (CPCCA), a multi-partisan group of MPs which organized an international conference on
antisemitism in Ottawa in 2010, and was vice-chair of the CPCCA's inquiry panel into domestic antisemitism within Canada, which published its report in 2011.
Provincial politics Reid was a founding member of the Lanark Landowners Association, the first of the county-based property rights associations that developed into the
Ontario Landowners Association. A longtime friend and supporter of the OLA's first president,
Randy Hillier, Reid encouraged Hillier to run for the
Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario candidacy for the
2007 provincial election in Reid's riding of in Lanark—Frontenac—Lennox and Addington. Prior to the nomination, some members of the provincial party expressed concern about Hillier's candidacy, and the
Toronto Star speculated that the party might disqualify him. Reid responded that he would be "very disappointed" if Hillier were prevented from running, adding "I can't think of anything more dangerous to our prospects [of winning in this riding]". In October 2007, Hillier was elected MPP for Lanark—Frontenac—Lennox and Addington by a narrow margin. In 2009, Reid was one of two Ontario MPs to endorse Randy Hillier's bid for the provincial PC leadership.
Other initiatives • Reid has held 11 "constituency referendums" in which he asked his constituents how he should vote on a moral issue. This includes votes on the
Anti-Terrorism Act (2001), the
Species at Risk Act (2002), the
Civil Marriage Act (2005) and a
parliamentary motion on reopening the abortion debate (2012). He has then voted as instructed by constituents. On two of these occasions, this caused him to vote against his party. • Each year, Reid donates to charity the proceeds of the $20,000 pay raise that MPs voted themselves in 2001. Each year the money is used to purchase
defibrillators for use in hockey rinks, seniors centres, and local police forces in his riding. Reid explained his decision to make the donations by saying, "MPs were making $109,000 at the time. If a single guy living in a small town can't get by on $109,000, he's not trying too hard." • In an annual survey conducted by the
Hill Times newspaper in May 2006, Reid was voted second in the "Most Generous MP" category, second in the "Most Fun to Work For" category, third in the "Throws the Best Parties" category, and second in the "Worst-Dressed Male MP" category. Reid's dress habits have since met with greater media approval; in 2007 Reid told the
Hill Times that he thought Fred Astaire and the Duke of Windsor were "the two best-dressed men of the 20th century," and in the December 2013 issue of
iPolitics, Reid was cited as one of the "Top 10 list of the best dressed MPs, chosen for their extra thought on style...." • Each June since 2003, Reid has held an artisanal
beer tasting event on Parliament Hill. Reid says the event "promotes small-scale, artisanal, value-added production that is ... closely associated with the land, agriculture, recapturing the traditional way of doing things." Despite this, Reid has the lowest hospitality budget in the House of Commons, prompting CBC reporter
Terry Milewski to brand Reid the “supreme leader of the Tightwads.” ==Electoral record==