National Post

Tiny Canadian firm helped swing the door for Brexit

- Patrick Foster Martin Evans and

LONDON • With the entire political establishm­ent massed against them and the bookmakers giving them no hope, the Leave campaign faced what many thought was an impossible battle to take Britain out of the European Union.

But election data published Friday has provided a window into how Vote Leave upset the odds to land a sensationa­l referendum victory.

While the Remain camp boasted of its success in reaching out to millions of people on Facebook, home to the millennial voters who would be expected to back Britain staying in the EU, it has emerged that the Leave campaign spent nearly half of its cash on a secretive consultanc­y firm that helped win the social media battle.

AggregateI­Q, a technology company operating out of a tiny office above an optician’s in Victoria, B.C., was paid $ 5.7 million by Leave campaigner­s in the run-up to last year’s EU vote — equivalent to more than 10 per cent of the money spent by both sides during the campaign.

According to the Elector- al Commission figures, no other company or individual was handed more cash during the referendum battle, with the official Vote Leave group spending 40 per cent of its £11.1 million budget on the firm.

Run by a former university administra­tor, AIQ is a low-profile consultanc­y that, among other things, specialize­s in developing highly targeted Facebook advertisin­g.

Vote Leave officials said the company was “instrument­al” in securing an Out vote in last June’s referendum, after developing sophistica­ted models to relentless­ly hone the campaign’s online message.

A senior figure on the Leave campaign said: “Their prime focus was buying and placing ads and optimizing them, working out which ones worked best.”

AIQ was set up in 2013 by Zack Massingham, a 34-yearold Canadian and former university official turned digital marketing guru.

The company has 20 staff and works out of a second floor office in a shopping centre in downtown Victoria.

Its senior staff keep a very low public profile, fiercely guarding the identity of their clients, who are drawn from across the political spectrum.

An insider said: “We look to work on both sides of the aisle. We don’t want to be pigeonhole­d and we don’t ally ourselves to any political movement.”

Massingham said his company has worked “on everything from small mayoral campaigns, to presidenti­al primaries in the U. S.,” although it is understood that it was not involved with Donald Trump’s successful presidenti­al bid.

He added: “We have worked in Europe, North America, South America, and Africa — across the political spectrum — helping campaigns, candidates, and other organizati­ons to build and mobilize audiences, engage with their voters, and make sense of these interactio­ns through the data they collect.

“We build software tools, database solutions, and engagement strategies that help focus campaign efforts to achieve their goals.”

The c o mpany’s website features an approving quote from Dominic Cummings, the campaign director of Vote Leave, who says: “Without a doubt, the Vote Leave campaign owes a great deal of its success to the work of AggregateI­Q . We couldn’t have done it without them.”

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