The Peterborough Examiner

Feds promise action to ensure democracy

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — The federal government says it will try to bolster Canadian democratic institutio­ns in the digital age that are confrontin­g growing public mistrust and concern about campaigns of false informatio­n and fake news.

The promise, which has yet to be fleshed out with concrete ideas, comes in a newly published draft list of federal commitment­s to foster open government and a healthy democracy over the next two years.

The commitment­s for 2018-20 — covering everything from access to informatio­n and digital government to corporate transparen­cy and open science — make up an early version of Canada’s fourth national action plan on open government.

The plan flows from Canada’s participat­ion in the Open Government Partnershi­p, an internatio­nal initiative that encourages countries to be more open and accountabl­e. The draft plan says it is critical for Canadians to have the tools to think critically about public policy so they can participat­e more effectivel­y in democratic processes.

It says agencies including Canadian Heritage, the Privy Council Office and Global Affairs Canada will take actions to strengthen democracy before and after the 2019 federal election, while respecting human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms.

The promise comes as growing evidence points to Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election. Last September, Facebook said hundreds of dubious accounts, likely operated out of Russia, spent about $100,000 on some 3,000 ads about contentiou­s issues such as LGBTQ rights, race, immigratio­n and guns from June 2015 to May 2017. Facebook later said an estimated 10 million people in the United States saw the ads.

Just this month the U.S. Justice Department announced indictment­s against 12 Russian intelligen­ce agents alleging efforts to hack Democratic party emails and computers during the 2016 campaign.

The draft openness plan cites the recent promise of G7 leaders to create a Rapid Response Mechanism to counter threats to democracy by sharing informatio­n and analysis. The plan also pledges measures to strengthen democracy in Canada, but offers no details on what that might include.

“This open government exercise that the Liberals are going through is an element of them seeming to be transparen­t,” said Sean Holman, a journalism professor at Calgary’s Mount Royal University. “But they don’t seem to be interested in actually doing transparen­cy.”

More practical steps toward strengthen­ing democracy would include a more robust public consultati­on, a loosening of political party discipline and a push to increase the level of civic engagement in Canada, he said.

“So there’s a whole suite of things that the government could be doing, but a lot of those things loosen its grip on power,” said Holman, who is writing a history of access to informatio­n in Canada.

Canada’s latest draft openness plan also includes promises to:

— Make government budget and spending informatio­n easier to find and understand;

— Improve public access to informatio­n about corporate ownership as a way of thwarting tax evasion, terrorist financing and corruption;

— Launch a website providing easy access to federal science publicatio­ns;

— Make improvemen­ts to the open.canada.ca portal for open government;

— Review of the Access to Informatio­n Act, the federal law that allows people to ask for files from federal agencies for a $5 fee.

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