:
Thank you, Madam Chair, for the invitation.
Freedom, democracy and the rule of law are not clichés. In fact, many from around the world have chosen Canada because of our respect for and practice of these ideals. Arguably, those who are from the outside come to treasure them and want to protect them even more, because many of us have seen and lived lives without these rights.
Twenty-first-century Canada is a multicultural society with immigrants and refugees from all continents and all walks of life, who call it their settlement home. It is a beautiful and ideal world that those before us in this generation worked very hard to build—a fair, respectable, multicultural society that honours diversity and yet commits to preserving the uniqueness and the very essence of being Canadian, those much-cherished ideals of equality, universal values and human dignity.
Authoritarian regimes around the world, however, do not subscribe to this same value system we believe in. Not only do they work to undermine us, to turn our country into a subservient state—kowtowing to their direct influence, whether they are the Russian Federation, China, Iran or other less resourceful or ambitious regimes—but they are also willing to sacrifice our trusted institutions, the harmonious society we have carefully built over decades and the people who are in it.
I used to be a partisan politician, but now that I'm back as an ordinary Canadian citizen, I continue to share with millions of fellow Canadians the same deep level of worry and concern for my adopted country, because foreign interference is a national threat. It should have been a pan-partisan issue. Protecting the country and its people is arguably the top job for any sovereign government, yet we are seeing an inexplicably action-free policy exercised by our federal government vis–à–vis interference from the most resourceful and ambitious of all foreign states, the Chinese Communist Party regime.
To be clear, the government is not mute and has not been seen to have done nothing. It loudly verbalized its spontaneous concerns and cited SITE, CSE, NSICOP, NSIRA, CEIPP, CSIS and, recently, a rapporteur as proof of things it has done, but none of that, I would argue, has protected sufficiently the 21st-century Canada that we are in, and my experience has been that my country did not protect me from foreign interference and the attacks I've experienced.
In a thriving, diverse, multicultural country such as ours, it is up to those who are in power to stop the corruption and the deceit, to safeguard the exposed and the vulnerable few, to safeguard Canadians of all mother tongues from predatory states and their coercion, and to safeguard Canada from exploitation and manipulation.
I thank you for giving me this opportunity to answer many of the questions you may have and to share my views. Recently in the Canadian broadcasting world, we have seen more than sufficient coverage on the issues and the challenges that have been presented to us today, and I urge all of you to take some action, to be determined, to stand up and to protect our country, especially the people who are in our country.
Thank you again for this opportunity.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Distinguished members of the committee, good evening from Washington, D.C., and thank you for inviting me.
I was asked to discuss the collaboration of my organization, the Alliance for Securing Democracy at the German Marshall Fund, with the Government of Canada and Microsoft on a joint initiative that brought together leading experts, policy-makers and industry professionals from around the world to produce a practical guide of best practices that key stakeholders in democracies can use to counter foreign interference in elections.
To provide some context to what motivated us to join this partnership with your government, it's worth briefly explaining the genesis of the Alliance for Securing Democracy.
We launched in the summer of 2017 to put Russia's interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election into context for American policy-makers and offer solutions on how to better defend our democratic institutions and processes from autocratic threats, not just from Russia but from other state-sponsored actors like China and Iran.
The name “Alliance” was very deliberate. What happened in the United States did not occur in a vacuum. Over many decades, Russian interference has targeted numerous democracies, including several of the U.S. and Canada's allies and partners in Europe. Autocrats' tools of interference, which include cyber-operations, malign finance and information manipulation, among many others, have been refined to exploit modern technologies and target all sectors of democratic society.
We knew that as a civil society organization we had some small role to play in facilitating the exchange of best practices between governments, companies and other civil society organizations, and that we could learn lessons from across sectors and national borders in order to offer guidance to policy-makers and shut down institutional vulnerabilities in our democracy. In this regard, our partnership with the Government of Canada and Microsoft on combatting election interference as part of the French government's Paris Call for Trust and Security in Cyberspace was at the heart of what we do.
The compendium of best practices that we published along with the Government of Canada and Microsoft offers reminders of best methods to secure election infrastructure, procedures to ensure voting integrity during the pandemic, transparent ways of communicating with the public about threats to elections, and best practices in building citizen resilience to disinformation. It even highlights examples of Canadian good practice, which include the Canadian Heritage programs to fund civil society initiatives to tackle election-related misinformation and disinformation, and the government-wide critical election incident public protocol. If used as intended, Canada's protocol should be an excellent model of transparency and communication with the public to reduce the likelihood of politicians' manipulating threat information about election interference.
This compendium of best practices is not just in circulation in Canada and the United States, of course. It is being put to good use around the world. Anecdotally, U.S. government colleagues have informed me that they disseminate the compendium to government counterparts in the global south, where many nations are under-resourced and increasingly at the forefront of Russian and Chinese malign influence operations.
In Canada, you do not need me to tell you that foreign interference in democracy remains a serious challenge. The rise in Chinese state-sponsored interference in Canadian democracy through targeting specific ridings and candidates in elections, malign financial coercion and subversion of civil society, including the Chinese Canadian diaspora, have been well documented and on the agenda of your committee, of course. Russian state-sponsored actors have amplified domestic divisions on issues of heightened political sensitivity, including the war in Ukraine, vaccination mandates, the “freedom convoy” in Ottawa and economic hardships facing Canadian voters.
Undermining Canadians' confidence in democratic governance and the integrity of Canadian elections is an overarching objective of these authoritarian regimes. Therefore, the compendium of best practices that we published continues to be a useful guide, not just in Canada but for democracies worldwide. It's illustrative not only of the importance of cataloguing the policies and procedures that can secure elections to rising autocratic threats, but also of the utility of conducting such multi-stakeholder exercises.
No nation, government, company or civil society organization is an island unto itself. By working together as allies and breaking down barriers between governments, industry and civil society, we will be better positioned to secure democratic elections and institutions from an ever-evolving autocratic threat ecosystem.
I look forward to your questions. Thank you very much.
:
The experience was not just within my riding, as we all know—as you all know, as federal politicians. A lot of time, especially at election time, the party's platform and the party's leadership accounts for a large number of people...who will be voting for you or not.
Much of the disinformation that I observed was levelled against my party, misconstruing the platform as well as attacking the leader for the Conservative Party of Canada back then, Mr. Erin O'Toole. It was also levelled at me. They attacked Mr. O'Toole as if he was a white supremacist and anti-Chinese, anti-Asian.
As if that's not ridiculous enough, they levelled similar attacks on me personally. The fact that I'm an ethnic Chinese, that I speak fluent Cantonese and Mandarin, and that I read and write the language, didn't prevent them from labelling me as a traitor. I was a sell-out for what I had proposed in the last session of Parliament as my private member's bill, Bill , the foreign interference registry act. It was misinterpreted and misconstrued as something that would cause persecution against all Chinese-Canadians, causing them significant grief.
These are things that I saw and personally experienced.
:
Thank you. That's a clear answer. We don't know.
I think that's true, although there's evidence in a report I found and read very intently. It's called “Mis- and Disinformation During the 2021 Canadian Federal Election”. It goes through a very detailed analysis of.... It mentions your riding and the disinformation campaign you were subjected to, which I don't think anyone doubts.
I have a couple of quotes from this report:
If it is these Chinese Canadian voters who shifted against the Conservative Party, it should be detectable in the survey data. We evaluated whether Chinese Canadians switched their vote intentions or changed their evaluations of the Conservative Party using survey data collected during the campaign and just after the election. We compared Chinese Canadians' vote intentions during the first two weeks of the campaign to their vote intentions during the last two weeks, with the results in Figure 22.
Here's the important part: “The two left panels show that there was no change” in voter intentions. That's interesting, because it demonstrates the exact opposite of what you are maintaining and what you have said publicly numerous times.
Given the fact that you don't know and have now said that on the record at this committee, and that there's evidence to suggest there actually was no change in voter intentions, how can you maintain what you believe?
:
I haven't read the survey or the report of the survey, and I would be very keen to understand what language the survey is conducted in.
You mentioned, sir, about the Chinese. There are no homogeneous Chinese in my riding. There are Chinese from Taiwan. There are Chinese from Hong Kong and from mainland China.
Some of them use WeChat, especially the mainland Chinese. Some of them solely rely on WhatsApp—the Hong Kong Chinese—and the Taiwanese Chinese use LINE as a communication means. I don't know when the last time was that you picked up the phone when you didn't know the number, but perhaps....
I would probably refer the committee to also study the McGill University data mining professor's study on the disinformation that I experienced, or maybe Infowatch, as well as the Digital Forensic Research Lab.
:
First of all, I have no confidence that the established mechanism would effectively detect and therefore provide me with sufficient warning ahead of the attacks.
Understand that these attacks are, a lot of times, using the foreign languages of Mandarin and Chinese. They're in written and verbal language, videos, and opportunities provided only to one particular candidate against the other. I don't know if the SITE task force is equipped to deal with that.
Secondly, even if I was warned, what am I going to do? How would I be able to counter this? What tools in the tool set am I, as a candidate in an election, provided with so that I can effectively combat this?
The CEIPP report mentioned notifying Canadians—with a very high threshold. The notification to Canadians, I would imagine, even if that high threshold was met, would probably be in English and French. None of these people who are subject to foreign interference would be listening to or receiving the message.
As always, all of my questions go through the chair.
I want to thank the witnesses for being here today.
Mr. Salvo, I would like to come to you first.
I'm very curious. You talked about the partnership between you, Microsoft and the Government of Canada, if I have that correct. I'm just wondering how that works. Could you tell us a bit about how people are educated about it?
One thing that we're hearing, of course, is that people don't know where to go to find relevant information. As a member of Parliament who represents a more rural and remote riding, I see more and more across Canada that local papers are falling by the wayside and not having the resources to continue their important work to provide journalism that can be held to a certain standard. People are going more and more online, which may or may not give them the best information.
I'm just wondering how we are educating people about this resource.
:
Thank you, ma'am. It's a great question.
What's difficult, especially as a representative of civil society, is that our resources are extremely limited to do exactly the type of engagement that's necessary to make sure that these best practices get in the hands of the right people. By “the right people”, I mean election officials all over the country, local journalists who are in a position to educate their specific communities, mayors, and people who are really on the ground in their communities.
This is an extremely dense and difficult set of issues. We're talking about election administration procedure. My organization works on these issues and I wouldn't even stick my hand up and say I'm an expert in every single aspect of election administration. To expect the ordinary citizen, who doesn't spend time understanding these things.... It's difficult. The same is true for under-resourced election officials as well, all over the country.
It's really a challenge that government in particular.... The federal level has to provide the resources for organizations, not just like mine, but also for state and local officials themselves, and for provincial officials in Canada to be able to work with community leaders on the ground to get this information out.
Look at the constituents in Mr. Chiu's riding, for example. They never would have been aware of state-sponsored disinformation tactics targeting a particular campaign or what they could do to inoculate themselves against such tactics. That information is very hard to come by.
This is why we created this initiative in the first place. It's incumbent on civil society and governments in particular. It's a resource exchange, but it's also an information exchange. The information gaps are all over in this field. The average voter is essentially a sitting duck for a lot of these tactics. That's why we tried to put together some sort of handbook that addresses both election administration and resilience. How do you provide Canadian voters with more information about these tactics? What defences can they adopt, so that when they go to the polls they are voting freely and fairly according to their conscience, without any sort of undue influence from foreign state-sponsored actors?
I appreciate that you mentioned earlier some of the realities—for example, on the convoy that we had here in Ottawa. We know there was foreign money: There was Russian money sent to support that convoy. It's quite shocking when you read the information that came out of the public inquiry, when you understand how quickly money was moving in ways that we couldn't necessarily track.
Of course, that means there's foreign money that's influencing us, either during the election or around an election, which is very concerning.
I think you said this well: This is an issue that is rapidly changing. How things are being done is changing, so we have to have processes that are responsive to that. I'm wondering if you could talk about the influence of that kind of money. What are the ways that we can track...? What are the ways that we can look into the future and think, “Here's how we're going to monitor that so that we make sure those dollars aren't influencing Canadians”?
:
Absolutely, and part of the problem is that we, as democracies, allow the fox into the henhouse. With a lot of our financial legislation, when the money comes in from China or Russia and is connected to state-sponsored actors or to the governments directly, oftentimes it's legal. It's through legal means. It's through shell companies and real estate and others.
That's because in Canada and the United States, at least today, to my knowledge there's no registry, not only for foreign agents.... Well, we have one in the United States, but it's poorly implemented. Canada to date does not have one. Also, a beneficial ownership registry would at least unmask who the hidden owners are behind companies and behind property. That's how a lot of this autocratic authoritarian money enters into Canadian politics, American politics and European politics.
That's what's so insidious and long term about the use of the financial tools to corrode our democracies. It's not always about a particular election, a particular candidate or a particular riding. It's way more insidious than that. It's about moving money into our system, masking the origin of that money and presenting it as authentic Canadian voices trying to influence Canadian politics when there's a clear tie to an authoritarian regime like China or Russia.
Tightening up laws in the financial space...and this is applicable to my country too. I'm not trying to cast stones at Canada here. It's a problem facing a lot.... In the EU, there are many governments facing this exact problem. Ensuring that there's full transparency over the money that's coming into our country through property and in companies is a sure way to expose and provide sunlight onto the origins of money entering domestic politics from abroad.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair, and, through you, thank you to our witnesses.
I want to start by quoting from the study that Mr. Turnbull quoted from earlier. It says this:
We cannot preclude the possibility, however, that there was some influence at the riding level. Moreover, the mere perception that China was able to influence the race in Steveston—Richmond East may have a chilling effect on criticism of China in Canadian politics.
Moreover, if Mr. Turnbull had read the explanatory notes, he would have read that the survey data was from 689 Chinese Canadians from across the country and was not specific to Mr. Chiu's former riding. I would commend to the committee the possibility of reading the entire report.
For you, Mr. Chui, looking at intimidation efforts that may have happened in your riding and in other ridings where there are large diasporas of Canadians of Chinese descent, what impacts do these types of efforts have on individuals and their families here in Canada, and also on those who may have families in China, Hong Kong and other areas?
:
It's something that even I, personally, do not feel completely comfortable with—sharing my own personal experience and thoughts, knowing that the PROC committee meeting here is public and is viewable by anybody with an Internet link. Therefore, I will just recount my observations during the election time.
There were seniors groups that Alice Wong and I, both Richmond MPs, organized to meet up with during the election time, because we sensed that we had seen some of these attacks happening to us. We thought we would be able to sit down with the seniors groups to clear their minds of some of the misunderstandings. We spent about two or three hours with a group of a dozen and a half. These were leaders in the seniors groups and were mainly mainland Chinese.
At the end of it, they cried. They had been worried about their kids—their children and their grandchildren—being discriminated against by Kenny Chiu and the Conservatives and their policies, and we cleared the air. We told them none of that was true. They were reassured. They all left happy. Some of them even carried some of the snacks that we provided.
In only 24 or 48 hours, I can't remember, I started to see the same group of seniors show up at my opponent's campaign office and cheer for that person. They had no idea who he was, were not able to communicate with him and also did not support him. I know that for a fact from many of the policies my opponent's party has espoused.
To me, that was a huge flip. One of the leaders in the seniors groups had gone incommunicado. He did not answer my calls. He would not answer my phone calls, my text messages, or anything. He just completely detached from me.
:
If you don't have the information but you provided it to CSIS, so CSIS.... What we heard at this committee was that there was no question that there were lots of messages being spread; there was disinformation in a text, but there wasn't the connection that actually made it that it wasn't just Canadians that were unhappy with you or the Conservative Party. For foreign interference to take place, it has to be a coordinated effort led by a foreign entity. If all the information you had was presented to CSIS or other members of the national security community...they actually said that they couldn't determine that it wasn't just Canadians who were upset.
On that point, I would just like to point out that you, Mr. Kenny Chiu, Kerry Diotte, Tamara Jansen, Bob Saroya and Alice Wong all lost the 2021 election. Do you know what the members also have in common? Voting against banning conversion therapy.
In your riding in particular, the progressive NDP vote actually went up 4%. It's my understanding that you had two very public resignations from two of your youth council members over the fact that you voted against banning conversion therapy.
How much of this decision impacted your election loss, when a number of your other colleagues who also lost also had very public negative reactions about your votes on banning conversion therapy?
I'm just going to remind Ms. O'Connell and Mr. Chiu that if we can't take turns, then we need to go through the chair. I know that Mr. Chiu, as somebody who has served in the House, knows the rules, as does Ms. O'Connell, who is serving in the House.
I would just remind us all to go through the chair if we're not going to be able to just have a conversation back and forth and take turns.
With that, I'll go to Madame Gaudreau.
[Translation]
Ms. Gaudreau, you have two and a half minutes.
I have no questions for Mr. Chiu, but I would just ask him not to speak for other members of Parliament, because I can verify that some of the things he's said are incorrect. Maybe don't do that for other MPs.
Mr. Salvo, I would like to come back to you. In doing some research around the work that you do, I saw—hopefully I get this right—the authoritarian interference tracker, which is a really amazing tool. It gives a lot of information about interference and what kind of interference, and then there's a lot of information that explains it, so that if you were a civilian, you could look in there and understand what the type of interference was and what the implications are, and find information about how that works. I think it's really an amazing tool.
Could you talk a bit about that tool and how accessible it is? Is it something that a government like Canada's could get behind with a lot more focus?
The other thing that I want to note—maybe I'm just not good at using it, because I didn't spend a lot of time on it—is that there was nothing I could find that was past 2020. Is there a process that I'm missing in that system?
:
For those who don't know, the authoritarian interference tracker is an online tool we have, which maps and catalogues Russian and Chinese interference in the trans-Atlantic community, including Canada, since the year 2000. There are cases beyond 2020, but they may not be applicable to Canada. It is a living tool, so it is constantly being updated with new cases. Certainly, there are cases in Canada from the last two to three years that weren't being included.
The utility of the tool is to show two things. First, there are several tactics these authoritarian governments use to interfere in democracies, and ones we may not pay attention to, like the subversion of civil society groups. Think tanks and student associations are targeted and set up by authoritarian governments, which try to mask their connections to them, in order to shape discourse, promote censorship or forbid certain topics from being discussed in academic or political settings. It's to show how these tools are used to not only interfere in elections but to shape everyday democracy and discourse in our countries.
The other utility here is, hopefully, to show that these tools aren't really politically motivated. They are non-partisan when they are deployed. Yes, there are moments, and we are having a political debate about moments in which an authoritarian government might weigh in, trying to shape a particular election campaign. The tracker shows hundreds of cases in which these tools are being used well outside of the context of electoral democracy, simply to get Canadians, Americans and Europeans at each other's throats and to denigrate the whole process of living in a democratic society.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair, and thank you to the witnesses for being here today.
I will make one request of Mr. Chiu, and I have a question for Mr. Salvo.
Mr. Chiu, you mentioned that soon after 2020, you were provided a briefing by CSIS, and two more additional times. I'm going to ask you to submit to this committee the dates of those meetings you had with CSIS, for our timeline.
Mr. Salvo, you were talking a bit about the difficulties with respect to making sure average Canadians, and in your case Americans, understand what foreign interference looks like, some of the tactics that are used, and how we can detect, deter and counter some of those initiatives.
Can you elaborate a bit about any advice you would have for us in terms of recommendations that perhaps parliamentarians and their staff could be briefed on such tactics? What would you recommend our committee look at in terms of the detection and deterrents?
:
I think it's most important to look at what governments and countries that have been dealing with this challenge much longer than yours and mine have done to try to counter these threats and build resilience in their society. The Nordic and Scandinavian countries and the Baltic states are particularly good examples. Parliamentary exchanges, I would argue, are an excellent way to determine what you can do as a legislative body to not only pass legislation but to engage in outreach in your ridings.
That is really where a lot of the rubber meets the road. You all have cachet, presumably, with your constituents, and you are trusted, authoritative voices in your constituencies.
Leaving politics aside—I know that's hard—if you put aside, say, a specific instance of interference in a particular riding and talk about the tools and tactics that are used.... This shouldn't be controversial or partisan. These are tools and tactics that have been used in dozens of countries all over the democratic space. It's not unique to Canada, as you know. It's not unique to my country.
That will help. As we've learned in the States, that's really broken down some of the partisan divides. We shed light on these tactics and make ordinary voters aware of how they might be targeted at even the local level.
I know, Mr. Salvo, that you have a bit more to share. I will ask this, if it's suitable, similar to the request made of Mr. Chiu: If you have additional information to share with the committee, could you submit it to the clerk? We'll have it translated and then shared with committee members in both official languages.
With that, Mr. Chiu and Mr. Salvo, I would like to thank you on behalf of PROC committee members for being here. We apologize for the technical issues at the beginning of this set.
We'll be moving into our next panel. With that, we wish you both a good rest of the day and thank you for your time and attention today. If there is anything else, please just send it to the clerk, and it will be circulated.
For the purpose of committee members, we know that bells will start shortly. Do we have agreement to work through the first 20 minutes of bells? We'll have the clock put up on the screen, so that we're all aware of it. Is that suitable?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair, for the invitation to address the committee today.
My name is Sam Andrey. I am the managing director of The Dais, a policy and leadership institute at Toronto Metropolitan University, where we work to advance public policy solutions for the responsible governance of technology and a strong democracy.
We have been conducting regular surveys of Canadians over the past four years to better understand online misinformation and to track public attitudes toward regulating online platforms.
I want to begin tonight by sharing a high level of what we understand from our research about the spread of online misinformation in Canada. About half of Canadians say they see false information online at least a few times a month. The use of online platforms for news, particularly Facebook, YouTube and private messaging apps, is associated with higher exposure to and belief in misinformation.
About 10% to 15% of Canadians have a relatively high degree of belief in misinformation and are more likely to hold false or conspiratorial beliefs about many topics, such as COVID-19, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and immigration. This group tends to have lower trust in mainstream media and public institutions in general. Conversely, this group shows higher levels of trust in and use of social media and messaging platforms for news, and people in this group are less likely to say that they fact-check things they see online using another source. These collectively are conditions that can be taken advantage of by foreign actors to both seed and amplify false information online.
What are potential policy solutions to this challenge? This is not an easy question for a liberal democracy while protecting free expression and avoiding unintended consequences, including the potential to produce chilling effects, surveillance creep and the censoring of voices that represent the most vulnerable.
There are of course proactive efforts the federal government is already supporting in some way—things such as digital literacy programming in schools and communities, and maintaining strong, independent journalism. We also have measures in place now, through the Canada Elections Act, to monitor digital election ads and prohibit foreign parties from directly purchasing those ads.
However, a number of allied jurisdictions are also now advancing regulatory models that place additional legal responsibilities on online platforms to more transparently address their systemic risks to society, including their role in spreading foreign disinformation that is designed to undermine democratic processes.
Regulatory models could, for example, advance responsibilities to require labels on synthetic or deepfake media, or to clamp down on what's commonly referred to as “coordinated inauthentic behaviour”, a tactic that can be used by foreign actors to artificially spread false information through the use of fake or automated accounts.
There are also efforts under way to improve tools that enable users to more easily fact-check or understand the context of what they come across online. For example, WhatsApp has rolled out a feature for highly forwarded messages, whereby you can tap on a magnifying glass and send that message to a Google search. Twitter has also begun piloting its “Community Notes” feature, which allows users to add context to misleading tweets, which others can then rate the helpfulness of. Nudging features like these, as well as other efforts that encourage users to think twice before sharing, can help mitigate the spread of misinformation without censorship.
I want to close by saying that we have found, through our surveys, that these platform governance proposals are supported widely, by more than 80% of Canadians, and that the majority of Canadians believe the intentional spread of false information is a threat to Canadian democracy that needs to be addressed by our governments.
Thank you for the opportunity. I'm looking forward to your questions.
:
Thank you very much for the invitation to join your meeting today.
My name is Vivian Krause. I am in Vancouver, and I am appearing here as an individual.
The reason I am here is that I've had two experiences since 2017 with Elections Canada investigations, and I think that those experiences can perhaps be useful in looking to see how they went and how they can be improved.
Since 2017, I should say that I have been involved with two investigations, which were Leadnow and WE Charity. In both cases, these were non-profit, youth-focused organizations, which are very different from an authoritarian state government.
In both cases, the organization at the heart of the investigation had openly acknowledged that it had been trying to influence election outcomes. In both cases, there was clear evidence of funding from outside Canada.
For example, in their book, WEconomy, the Kielburger brothers write that they had been approached by Allstate—that's the American insurance company—wanting to “buy election results”. That's on page 253 of their book. They go on to explain, “[I]t's not what you think. For the insurance [company], the cause [was] youth empowerment,” but the Kielburgers explain further that they had calculated that it cost $34 to “buy” a youth vote. Allstate gave WE Charity $34 million for their youth program, which I take was enough funding for one million youth votes.
I'm sure we all agree that we want to encourage youth voting. That's not the issue. The issue is the funding.
The second point I'd like to raise is that, with Leadnow, the reason this was a concern to me is that Leadnow was created by an American organization. After the 2015 election, its executive director wrote in its annual report that year that it had run a Canadian campaign that had moved the needle, contributing greatly to the ousting of the Conservative Harper government.
Even in these two cases, where there was an admission on the part of the organization being investigated that they had been trying to influence the election's outcome, Elections Canada found nothing wrong.
In the case of Leadnow, I was interviewed. It was a four-hour interview, if I remember correctly, and I remember at the end of it how frustrated the Elections Canada investigator was. He said, “People like you who are concerned need to get the Elections Act changed, because”—as he said—“we can only enforce it. We can't change it.”
I think there are three specific things that need to be tightened. One is the types of activities that are regulated, especially with a focus on online activity. Two, the time frame for reporting funds is way too short. Three, non-cash, in-kind contributions are really where the impact is being felt.
The second point I would like to make, and I'll be brief, is that, to make our elections more resistant to outside interference, I believe that it's at the CRA that we need to see change, and, in particular, at the charities directorate. The reason this is so important is that charities can, in essence, Canadianize funds, so that once funds have gone through a Canadian charity, in the eyes of Elections Canada those funds are Canadian.
As I see it, the charities directorate has been operating largely on an honour system. I say that because for the last 30 years, CRA has revoked only 584 charities. That's an average of 22 charities per year over the past 20 years. That's less than one-tenth of 1% of Canada's 86,000 charities, so it is a negligible number.
Since last summer, CRA has revoked or put into the process of revocation a total of 18 charities run by a single individual, a tax lawyer in Vancouver. These audits, I think, are important to take a look at, because they're revealing, not only about the charities but, even more importantly, about CRA oversight.
One of the important things to note is that these 18 audits took, on average, 10 years from the point of the transaction or the activity that CRA found to be offside and revocation. The range was from a minimum of seven years to 21 years. That's just far too long.
In one case the audit report was completed in 2012. It took another 11 years before the charity was shut down just last month, as of March 25.
I draw your attention in particular to the case of Howe Sound Samaritans' Foundation, a Canadian charity—
:
I don't mean to cut you off, but I want to move on.
I'm an Albertan, Ms. Krause. It's been glaringly obvious to me throughout my political career that money has come across the border through various foundations and charities to advocate against things like the energy sector, against pipeline development. We've seen this, and I know you've spoken on these things a lot as well.
Foreign money can interfere in our domestic affairs in numerous ways if we allow it. Now we have some relatively serious allegations of money being funnelled in by a foreign state through proxies in Canada to help certain candidates win elections, win nominations, etc.
I had a bill back in a previous Parliament, , that would have banned third party advertising by any organization that received foreign funding. The issue seems to be, especially when it's on the charity side.... I'm wondering what conclusions you can infer when it comes to a foreign state actor, and how that would be different. The problem I believe Elections Canada has with this is that it's not able to sort out the molecules per se without keeping track of separate bank accounts and where the money actually comes from.
That's one of the glaring loopholes that I think we can all agree on here.
What are some of the other glaring loopholes that allow foreign money to flow into Canadian charities or into our political process that you think need to be closed?
:
That's the big question.
I think the answer is, number one, that the CRA is running the charitable sector on an honour system. There just isn't nearly enough auditing. When you have 80,000 charities and only one-tenth of 1% of them are shut down a year, it's just negligible.
Specifically with regard to elections, the two things I saw in the investigations that I was part of were, first, that organizations were having an influence via activities that aren't regulated. For example, online activities, or creating a donor base, or developing video content, or creating websites, editing reports, writing speeches, coaching and providing strategic guidance aren't regulated. None of those were reportable expenditures.
The second issue is the time frame. What I saw is that so much of the election preparation was done years in advance. By the time the two-year mark came around—that is, two years before an election—the groundwork was already laid. If you compare that with the timeframe for reportable expenditures, it's a matter of months.
It's very easy to circumvent the rules by making your expenditures before the reporting period even begins.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Through you, I'd like to thank the witnesses for being here with us this evening.
My first question is for Mr. Andrey.
You brought up some very interesting information with respect to disinformation campaigns and social media. We all know how disinformation campaigns on social media were used in Crimea prior to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
We all know that members of Parliament have a role to play in terms of informing our constituencies, but we also have a responsibility to make sure the information we are providing people is accurate.
One of the areas you mentioned, which I think would be interesting to hear a little more about, is the evolution of AI and what that can do in terms of misinformation campaigns out there. I've seen videos that have obviously been faked. They look and sound like a person but have been proven to be incorrect.
Can you elaborate a bit on what you're seeing on the ground in this regard, and how we can combat that?
:
Absolutely. I think, in general, automated content or bot accounts—which are sometimes called “coordinated inauthentic behaviour” by some of the big platforms—have been tactics used by foreign governments and state actors for quite a number of years. It's a form of automation. The concern is that the sophistication of these tactics is growing and that AI—in particular, generative AI, where text, video or images can be created more easily—is rapidly getting better and will make the detection efforts that platforms have tried to ramp up over time less successful. That is, I think, the biggest concern. Doctored videos, deepfake images and...text, as well, are growing in frequency.
In terms of what to do about it, there have been proposals that any synth-fake media should be labelled. Of course, there is legitimate use of synthetic media that is satirical or artistic. However, if we're concerned about the spread of misinformation, perhaps there should be a little label on these platforms that informs the user that's the case. If it is meant to mislead, the platforms could try to impose labels on these images and improve over time—get to the point of kicking users off the platforms who continue to post manipulated images without labels, for example.
In its most extreme form—I'm sorry if I'm talking for too long—there have been suggestions that generative AI tools like ChatGPT could keep a log of their outputs and that platforms could then, basically, track against that log to automatically add the labels that....
Again, these are ideas people are putting forward to try to address the risks.
:
This may sound like a bizarre question. Given your experience, and your expertise in governance.... We have parliamentary privilege in the House of Commons, which means that during question period, during debate, we can make statements as long as we're using proper language and not using unparliamentary language, but we can state things in the House which could be incorrect.
I'd like to say all 38 million Canadians are watching CPAC, watching QP, and watching us all the time. For those who are watching, I would anticipate you would agree with me that we also have a responsibility as members of Parliament to make sure the content we are creating in the House of Commons, in terms of what we are saying, is factually correct.
Otherwise, hiding behind parliamentary privilege to make statements in the House that are actually misleading and/or disinforming.... Would you agree that as parliamentarians we also have a responsibility to make sure the information we are creating is accurate? We make clips for social media. We use parliamentary ParlVU, or our parliamentary resources, to then post on social media, and a clip may have a missing preamble or whatever. Would you say that would mean we are creating disinformation campaigns as well?
A feature that used to be on Twitter, whereby you could see the location of the tweet, was removed recently with the Twitter ownership change, which has been a slight setback in that kind of transparency that you described.
Whether it's domestic or foreign is at the heart of this debate, of course. I've been watching the past meetings. The ability, in a short amount of time, in an election, to understand the source is sometimes not possible, and this relates to the threshold for mitigative communications.
While it's important to focus on what we can do about foreign disinformation through the Elections Act and through the penalties, it's also important to focus on what we can do in general about misinformation, regardless of its source, and how we can make the platforms healthier places for democratic discourse. This goes back to focusing on automated content and on nudges to encourage people to check things, and having different labels, as you described.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair, and I thank the witnesses for being here today. I really appreciate your testimony.
Mr. Andrey, I am going to ask you the questions that I have today.
I thought it was very interesting when I read about the survey of online harms in Canada. The information was interesting.
I'm really curious, because I know that Canadians' use of social media is growing. I represent a more rural and remote riding, and one challenge for small communities across Canada is that local papers are really struggling to find ways to survive in this economy. There is not as much support for them to make sure there are actually accredited journalists doing the work and making sure the information is true and factual.
I'm curious about this. You also said that Canadians are ready to see action taken on this issue. I'm curious about how people are making decisions about what a trusted source is when they go online.
If we're going to combat misinformation, what kinds of thoughts do you have around what we could provide so that people know if something is a trusted source or not?
There are a few things. We have been tracking trust in mainstream media as well as in social media for the last four years. The good news is that most of our mainstream media, like CBC, The Globe and Mail, CTV and Global News, are highly trusted institutions among most Canadians. While it has slipped slightly through the pandemic, which is a global phenomenon, not just in Canada, it has not significantly.
On the other hand, trust in social media continues to fall. In fact, fewer than one in 10 Canadians now say they have a high degree of trust in Facebook, TikTok and Twitter.
I think Canadians are getting the message about where they can access trustworthy information in some respects. On the other hand, though, use of these platforms for news continues to grow. These are a bit at odds, if that makes sense.
To your point, it relates to how we're consuming information and how we're using our phones. In terms of the ability to access forms of media like local media, there are a bunch of factors that contribute to that, which are worrisome. However, I wanted to answer your question specifically about trust.
:
That's a really good question.
We did a study two years ago, specifically around messaging apps. We dug into WeChat, in particular. Private messaging apps tend to be a key vehicle for diaspora communities. For example, WhatsApp is heavily used in the South Asian community in Canada. Telegram is used by the Russian and eastern European communities. Different apps are used differently. It's easy to communicate back home, and there are also already groups with family and friends, etc.
Having said all that, in general, the use of these apps is associated with higher exposure to and belief in misinformation. People who use those apps say that they receive misinformation. I think about 40% said that they receive it at least a few times a month, and WhatsApp, WeChat and Telegram stood out among those. We haven't looked specifically at language, but I think our findings are decent proxies for that.
Does that help?
:
That does help. Thank you.
This is my last question. It says here that 15% of Canadians have a high degree of belief in misinformation. This really makes me think of living through the convoy and watching journalists go on live television right there and ask people to share their thoughts. People just kept yelling, “Fake news!” and wouldn't say anything. I just watched that and found it so odd.
In any of the work that you've done, is there clarity about why this 15% is believing more misinformation. What can we do to remind people of the fact that Canada has some good things that we should look at?
Where is that distrust, and what can we do? It was mind-boggling to me that when they had a microphone in front of their face, and they could tell everyone whatever, they couldn't think of any words to say except, “Fake news!”
:
Don't be sorry. We appreciate the information you have provided to us. I'd like to thank Mr. Andrey and Ms. Krause for the information.
I would just like to say that if there's anything else you would like committee members to know, please share it with the clerk. We'll have it translated and available in both official languages and shared with members.
We are heading off to two votes, and because it will take a bit longer, we will not return.
We wish you a good rest of the day. We thank you for the information you've provided.
Members, we will see you on Thursday at 10 a.m. in room 025-B.
With that, the meeting is adjourned.