National Post (National Edition)

Federal probe into Facebook friends in high places

Facebook tried to recruit from Canadian Heritage

- CHRISTOPHE­R NARDI

OTTAWA • The federal heritage committee will study the seemingly “cosy” relationsh­ip between Facebook and Canadian Heritage after records show the company trying to recruit policy workers from the department co-leading efforts to regulate internet giants.

“To find out that Facebook appears to have a very intimate relationsh­ip with the government's offices is hugely problemati­c for us,” said the NDP's deputy heritage critic Heather McPherson.

Last week, McPherson brought forward a motion to the federal heritage committee requesting it “study the relations between Facebook and the federal government.” It was adopted Monday during an in-camera meeting, meaning it was not in public.

The Alberta MP says the need for the study stems from emails obtained by the NDP and first published by The Toronto Star that show what has been described by critics as a “cozy” and “unacceptab­le” relationsh­ip between the government and Facebook.

Earlier this year, Facebook's Canadian head of policy, Kevin Chan, emailed a senior official at Canadian Heritage inquiring about a “promising senior analyst” within the public service that Facebook could hire, according to the emails obtained via the Access to Informatio­n law.

In his message to Owen Ripley, Chan, who previously held top senior advisory roles in the federal government, says that the web giant is offering a “challengin­g,” “fascinatin­g” and lucrative job within Facebook's public policy team.

Chan added that he was open to hiring public servants who took a temporary leave of absence from their department to come work for Facebook. That means that they could later return to their public sector jobs if the department allowed it.

“I am happy to circulate to a few people who might be good candidates,” replied Ripley, who is director general, broadcasti­ng, copyright & creative marketplac­e at Canadian Heritage.

McPherson said that reading such emails at a time when Canadian Heritage is co-leading the Liberal government's efforts to regulate web giants makes her “sick to her stomach.”

“To think that a head of Facebook Canada is in fact basically posting a job with the government that is meant to be regulating them. It doesn't feel good,” the MP said.

As part of the examinatio­n, the heritage committee will require testimony from Chan, a former senior executive in the office of the Clerk of the Privy Council and also an adviser to former Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff, as well as Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault and Deputy Minister of Canadian Heritage Hélène Laurendeau.

It will also order all emails between Facebook and Canadian Heritage that have to do with job postings since November 2015, when the Trudeau Liberals first formed government.

Because the committee's vote was done behind closed doors during an in camera meeting, it was impossible to know if the Liberals voted in support or against the study. The motion requires at minimum the support of all opposition parties to pass.

McPherson could not say when the study would begin, but insisted that it would happen before the committee studied new legislatio­n reforming the Broadcasti­ng Act that was tabled last week.

Announced last week, the proposed changes to the Act notably give the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission (CRTC) the power to regulate online streaming companies such Netflix.

The CRTC could notably force platforms to promote more Canadian content and increase their financial contributi­ons to the Canadian cultural industry, or face monetary penalties.

News of this study comes two weeks after industry advocates criticized the government for the apparent proximity between senior officials at Canadian Heritage and Facebook Canada.

In a letter to Guilbeault on Oct. 30, independen­t media advocacy group FRIENDS of Canadian Broadcasti­ng demanded that the minister put an end to the ties between his department and the tech giant.

“FRIENDS is alarmed to learn of the cozy relationsh­ip between one of Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault's most senior officials … and Facebook's most senior Canadian lobbyist,” wrote the organizati­on's executive director, Daniel Bernhard.

“This revelation is especially critical as it comes precisely as the Department of Canadian Heritage was drafting legislatio­n that would have major impacts for Facebook.”

Monday, a spokespers­on for Guilbeault said that both the minister and the department would work with the committee.

“Standing committees are free to initiate any study within the framework of the exercise of their mandate and to conduct their deliberati­ons, as long as they do not go beyond the powers vested in them by the House,” Camille Gagné-Raynauld wrote in an email.

In response to a letter sent by FRIENDS two weeks ago, Guilbeault's office reiterated its commitment to taxing web giants and ensuring their revenues were shared “more fairly” with Canadian media companies and producers.

Facebook did not respond to a request for comment.

ALARMED TO LEARN OF THE COZY RELATIONSH­IP.

 ?? CHRIS WATTIE / REUTERS ?? Kevin Chan, Facebook Canada's global director and head of public policy, testifies at the Internatio­nal Grand
Committee on Big Data, Privacy and Democracy meeting on Parliament Hill on May 28, 2019.
CHRIS WATTIE / REUTERS Kevin Chan, Facebook Canada's global director and head of public policy, testifies at the Internatio­nal Grand Committee on Big Data, Privacy and Democracy meeting on Parliament Hill on May 28, 2019.
 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A spokespers­on for Minister of Canadian Heritage Steven Guilbeault said Monday the minister and his department will work with an investigat­ing committee.
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS A spokespers­on for Minister of Canadian Heritage Steven Guilbeault said Monday the minister and his department will work with an investigat­ing committee.

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