Toronto Star

Canadians in dark over voter data use

Commons committee says it will study whether parties need rules to protect public’s privacy

- ALEX BOUTILIER OTTAWA BUREAU

OTTAWA— As Parliament considers peering into political parties’ collection and use of sensitive personal informatio­n about citizens, those parties are busy developing more powerful and sophistica­ted tools to track voter data.

Canada has virtually no rules governing how political parties collect, use and share informatio­n about voters they meet on the doorstep, hear from on issues, or observe on social media.

In fact, Canadians are largely in the dark about what kinds of informatio­n parties collect and how they use it. But a House of Commons committee plans to study whether parties should have some basic rules for collecting — and protecting — private informatio­n like political beliefs, financial informatio­n, family makeup and contact informatio­n from millions of citizens.

Daniel Blaikie, the New Democrat MP who suggested the study, said multiple witnesses brought the issue to the Access to Informatio­n and Ethics committee during a review of the Privacy Act this year.

“Part of (the concern) is just that it is just something where there isn’t a lot known,” Blaikie said in an interview Thursday.

“Witnesses had expressed a lack of knowledge of where exactly (the data) goes,” Blaikie said.

“So the idea was really just to get a better idea, if there was going to be regulation, where would you put it and how would it work.”

How much of an appetite Parliament has to debate the issue, however, remains to be seen. All three major parties have a strong interest in keeping secret the specifics of their data operations.

“Witnesses had expressed a lack of knowledge of where exactly (the data) goes.” DANIEL BLAIKIE NDP MP WHO SUGGESTED THE STUDY

The Star asked the three parties to outline exactly what types of data they were collecting and what steps they take to protect that data from both outside intrusion, such as hackers, or internal misuse.

Liberal Party spokespers­on Braeden Caley did not get into specifics about what sorts of informatio­n the party collects — although he did point to the party’s privacy policy, which states they collect any “informatio­n you choose to give (them).”

In 2015, Caley said, 80,000 Liberal volunteers had an estimated four million conversati­ons with voters.

“We engage with Canadians from coast to coast to coast on a daily basis and we are committed to protecting informatio­n assets and any personal data we collect in the process,” Caley said. “The party also does not sell personal informatio­n under any circumstan­ces.”

The Conservati­ves use a database known as CIMS (Constituen­t Informatio­n Management System). Party spokespers­on Cory Hann said it would be difficult to list all the types of data that go into CIMS, as 338 local campaigns upload informatio­n into the central database.

However, he said in a statement, “I’d say you want to know if the household is voting Conservati­ve.”

“That’s the minimum, in my opinion, to make going door-to-door worthwhile.”

According to reported accounts from former party officials, CIMS also keeps track of donors, people who request election signs, and supports both electronic and on-the-ground outreach efforts. In 2007, one former Conservati­ve politician even accused the party of logging the con- cerns citizens brought to their local MPs into the party’s central database. Hann added the party takes “every precaution” to ensure the CIMS data is secure.

The NDP used a new voter database in 2015 called “Populous.” According to Dave Hare, the party’s director of operations, the database can track demographi­cs, party membership and even specific issues of concern for individual voters.

“The informatio­n is primarily used to direct our ground efforts (mobilizing supporters and talking to persuadabl­e voters) during and in-be- tween elections,” Hare wrote.

He said the NDP hired an independen­t firm to conduct a security audit of the database before the party used it, and even commission­ed “white hat” hackers to test its security.

It’s not clear when the parliament­ary committee will begin the study into this issue. The committee has committed to just two studies ahead of it — on private sector privacy and on the Security of Canada Informatio­n Sharing Act — but other business could push the examinatio­n of parties’ data practices further down the line.

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