Times Colonist

Interferen­ce may have ‘impacted’ 2021 poll outcome in B.C. riding

- LAURA OSMAN

OTTAWA — Foreign meddling attempts didn’t change who won the last two federal elections in Canada, but may have changed the result in one riding in 2021, a public inquiry concluded Friday.

A preliminar­y report by commission­er Marie-Josée Hogue said the extent of the impact of foreign interferen­ce is unknown, though the number of races involved is small.

“The ultimate effects of foreign interferen­ce remain uncertain,” she said in her report.

She singled out the 2021 results in the British Columbia riding of Steveston-Richmond East, where she said there is a “reasonable possibilit­y” that a foreign interferen­ce campaign targeting Conservati­ve candidate Kenny Chiu may have cost him the seat.

In her report, Hogue wrote that the campaign “could have impacted the result” in Chiu’s riding in 2021. But in a subsequent statement, she appeared to go a step further.

“There is one riding where disinforma­tion may have led to the election of one candidate over another,” said Hogue, who did not take questions Friday. “But I cannot say for sure.” Misleading informatio­n about Chiu and former Conservati­ve leader Erin O’Toole appeared in media outlets and social media sites with ties to Beijing, painting them as anti-China and trying to dissuade Chinese Canadians from voting for them. The actual impact of that campaign on the final vote is “difficult to determine,” Hogue found.

“In Canada, how someone votes is secret. It is therefore not possible to directly link the misleading media narratives with how any given voter cast their ballot,” the report said.

“And even if I were to assume that some votes were changed, there is no way to know whether enough votes were changed to affect the result.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said last month that several intelligen­ce and security agencies found “not a single riding” was impacted or changed as a result of foreign interferen­ce.

Conservati­ve foreign affairs critic Michael Chong said Hogue’s report doesn’t support what Trudeau told the public.

“This report is a damning set of conclusion­s and findings in the first phase of this inquiry, about what the Trudeau government has indicated over the last 18 months and contradict­s much of what the government has told us over that period of time,” Chong said Friday.

Chiu said Hogue was given a too-narrow mandate and little time to complete her work.

One of the issues is that the terms of reference were focused on the 2019 and 2021 elections, Chiu said. But that premise assumes that outside the time frame of the election, there was no foreign interferen­ce and that there has been “little impact on our democracy,” he said.

“And that, unfortunat­ely, is not the truth.”

He said China took issue with him because he introduced, in the spring prior to the fall election, a proposal for a foreign influence registry.

“The story did not start with the election in 2021.”

Chiu called for the Liberal government to follow through with its promise of a foreign agent registry. “If we can’t even move one inch on this lowest hanging fruit, then there is no point in talking about further activities,” he said.

O’Toole testified during the inquiry’s public hearings that he believed the misinforma­tion may have cost him as many as nine seats in the 2021 election.

That was not enough to change the overall results — the Liberals won 160 seats to the Conservati­ves’ 119 — but O’Toole said he thinks wins in those ridings would have allowed him to stay on as leader. He was ousted by the Conservati­ve caucus in February, less than five months after the election.

Hogue said the evidence she has seen doesn’t allow her to make any conclusion­s about the wider impact of the interferen­ce. “I do not mean to minimize the legitimate concerns of those who raised these issues. My findings are limited to the evidence before me,” she said.

The commission also scrutinize­d a 2019 Liberal nomination battle in the Toronto-area riding of Don Valley North, where Han Dong won the candidacy.

The Canadian Security and Intelligen­ce Service flagged a potential plot involving a busload of Chinese internatio­nal students with falsified documents provided by a proxy agent.

Hogue said there wasn’t enough evidence to draw any conclusion­s about what actually happened, nor was it in the commission’s mandate to do so.

“However, this incident makes clear the extent to which nomination contests can be gateways for foreign states who wish to interfere in our democratic processes,” she said.

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