Imperial Valley Press

Whistleblo­wer gives behind-the-scenes look at Trump campaign

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LONDON (AP) — Chris Wylie can’t prove the work he did for Cambridge Analytica helped Donald Trump win the 2016 presidenti­al election, but he thinks he has pretty good evidence. While working for the political consulting company from 2013 Wylie to 2015, Wylie’s team spoke to Americans in focus groups to identify deep-seated concerns. Then they tested ways to tap into those fears through social media. The slogans they developed later became the catchphras­es of the Trump campaign, he says. “My ears perked up when I started hearing some of these things like ‘drain the swamp’ or ‘build the wall’ or ‘the deep state’ because these were all narratives that had come out from the research that we were doing,” Wylie told an audience at London’s Frontline Club on Tuesday night.

The 28-year-old Canadian is at the center of allegation­s that Cambridge Analytica improperly used data from over 50 million Facebook users to identify voters who might be sympatheti­c to Trump’s message and target them with social media messages. In stories by the New York Times and Britain’s Guardian newspaper over the past week, he explained how he created the psychologi­cal warfare tools for Steve Bannon, the right-wing former banker who later became Trump’s chief strategist.

At the wide-ranging talk in London, Wylie described in further detail how the company worked and Bannon’s central role in shaping it. Wylie says Facebook data collected by a Cambridge University researcher was used as part of a project commission­ed by Cambridge Analytica. The firm says none of the Facebook data was used in the work it did for the Trump campaign. Facebook has suspended Wylie and Cambridge Analytica while it investigat­es the allegation­s.

Wylie was in his early 20s and had been working on a PhD in fashion trend forecastin­g when he went to work for defense and intelligen­ce contractor SCL Group, which later teamed with Bannon to create Cambridge Analytica. Alexander Nix, CEO of Cambridge Analytica, offered the “freedom to explore the research I really wanted to do,” Wylie said.

Bannon, unlike other clients, wasn’t impressed by Nix’s posh pedigree or fancy meals at exclusive London restaurant­s, so they closed the deal by setting up an office in Cambridge to align the new company with the history and prestige of Cambridge University. “We presented ourselves as much more academic. Not to say that we weren’t academic, but we needed to curate our presentati­on so we created this fake office ... beside the university to make it look like this is our Cambridge site. This is our Potemkin Cambridge office.’ “

But the data was real, and Cambridge Analytica used that informatio­n, together with insights gained from focus groups with angry Americans, to identify issues and target voters.

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