Times Colonist

KEITH MARTIN ON CHRIS WYLIE

Ex-MP remembers Victoria-raised data miner as ‘a smart, keen young man who was interested in learning about Parliament’

- JACK KNOX jknox@timescolon­ist.com

Keith Martin emerged from a conference in New York on Sunday to see Chris Wylie’s face all over the news.

“I couldn’t believe what I was reading. It didn’t compute at all.”

The former member of Parliament remembers Wylie as a bright Victoria teenager who, just over a decade ago, volunteere­d in Martin’s Ottawa office. Today, Wylie is the whistleblo­wer at the heart of an uproar over the exploitati­on of social media data to manipulate voters.

The 28-year-old says he was with London-based data-mining company Cambridge Analytica when it obtained the informatio­n of tens of millions of Facebook users for political purposes. The company, an offshoot of the SCL Group, was founded in late 2013. It was led largely by future Trump strategist Steve Bannon and had funding from U.S. conservati­ve billionair­e Robert Mercer.

Wylie, who left the company in late 2014, has been reported as saying he created the psychologi­cal warfare tool that allowed Cambridge Analytica to microtarge­t voters with social media messages that twisted their perception of reality.

All that baffles Martin, who sat as a Liberal for his last seven years as Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca MP, a job he held from 1993 to 2011. He remembers Wylie being part of a group of young Liberal volunteers, one who was so eager that Martin agreed to his request to spend several months doing unpaid work in the MP’s Ottawa office.

“He was a smart, keen young man who was interested in learning about Parliament.”

Martin, an emergency room doctor before entering politics, also knew Wylie’s parents from that life. They had interned as physicians at Royal Jubilee Hospital the year before he did, and helped show him the ropes when he was there.

“I haven’t spoken to Chris in a decade,” Martin said this week. He knew, though, that Wylie had gone on to work with the Obama Democrats in the U.S. and the Liberal Democrats in Britain, parties with “progressiv­e” leanings. That’s what made it so jarring to find Wylie’s name tied to hard-right conservati­ves like Bannon. “It’s counterint­uitive. I don’t understand at all.”

Since 2012, Martin has worked in Washington, D.C., as executive director of the Consortium of Universiti­es for Global Health, a non-profit that applies the research of 166 academic institutio­ns to human and environmen­tal health challenges around the world.

Wylie isn’t the only person in this tale with ties to Martin. Jeff Silvester, who worked in Martin’s Langford constituen­cy office until the MP’s departure from politics in 2011, went on in 2013 to become a co-founder of AggregateI­Q, which works with clients in the political realm.

Much has been made in Britain about the seemingly unlikely role the little-known Victoria company played in 2016’s Brexit campaign, when some supporters of the Leave side, including the official Vote Leave group (though not the rival Leave.EU) funnelled about £3.5 million through AggregateI­Q, money the company said went mostly to online advertisin­g. There have been attempts to link AggregateI­Q, Wylie, the Brexit work and Cambridge Analytica.

No, Silvester says. AggregateI­Q did contract work for SCL, Cambridge Analytica’s parent, in 2014, but had no contact with the company after that. He knew Wylie from the SCL contract days, and from their earlier associatio­n with Martin and the federal Liberals, but says Wylie played no part in AggregateI­Q getting the Brexit work in 2016. “He had no idea until well after the fact.”

Silvester said Wylie didn’t know until they bumped into one another on the street in Victoria some time after the vote. What still needs to be fully explained, though, is the earlier connection between SCL, Wylie and AggregateI­Q, all these paths between Victoria and Britain crossing.

AggregateI­Q recently vacated its Market Square offices, but Silvester says the company is still a going concern, and is simply relocating. It is feeling the heat, though, as its name gets bandied about as part of the larger story.

The company felt compelled to put out a statement this week: “There has been some speculatio­n in the media about AggregateI­Q and its services and we believe it is important to present the facts about our business. AggregateI­Q was founded in 2013 and is a digital advertisin­g, web and software developmen­t company based in Victoria, British Columbia. AggregateI­Q has always been 100 per cent Canadian owned and operated. AggregateI­Q works in full compliance within all legal and regulatory requiremen­ts in all jurisdicti­ons where we operate.

“AggregateI­Q has never managed, nor did we ever have access to, any Facebook data or database allegedly obtained improperly by Cambridge Analytica.”

In December, the U.K.’s informatio­n commission­er, Elizabeth Denham — a Victorian who took on the British job after holding a similar post in B.C. — singled out AggregateI­Q as one of 30 organizati­ons, including political parties and campaigns, data companies and social media platforms, being put in the spotlight as part of an investigat­ion of the use of data analytics for political purposes. (Wednesday, a Sinn Fein MP from Northern Ireland asked that Denham’s investigat­ion include a £32,750 payment made to AggregateI­Q by the Democratic Unionist Party in the run-up to the Brexit vote.)

B.C.’s deputy informatio­n and privacy commission­er, former Victoria school board chairman Michael McEvoy, has spent the past six months seconded to Denham’s office to help with her investigat­ion. He is due to become B.C.’s commission­er April 1.

B.C.’s acting commission­er, Drew McArthur, is conducting a separate investigat­ion into whether AggregateI­Q has been in compliance with the Personal Informatio­n Protection Act.

Silvester says AggregateI­Q is co-operating fully with the investigat­ions. He sounds frustrated, though, by the need to stamp out the fires, or at least wave away the smoke surroundin­g his company, as the whole WylieCambr­idge Analytica-Facebook story blazes away elsewhere.

There are, in fact, clouds and clouds of smoke to peer through as this all plays out, so many questions to answer. “It’s incredibly opaque,” Martin says.

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 ?? MATT DUNHAM, AP ?? Chris Wylie, who went to school in Victoria and worked in Martin’s Ottawa office, gives a talk in London on Tuesday.
MATT DUNHAM, AP Chris Wylie, who went to school in Victoria and worked in Martin’s Ottawa office, gives a talk in London on Tuesday.
 ?? ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST ?? Keith Martin at Claremont Secondary School in 2010, when he was MP for Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca MP.
ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST Keith Martin at Claremont Secondary School in 2010, when he was MP for Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca MP.

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