Waterloo Region Record

Cyber agency warns of election targeting

With more Canadians likely to vote by mail, CSE says foreign actors could try to influence voting

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — The federal cybersecur­ity agency is warning that Canadians are likely to run into some effort by foreign actors to influence or otherwise interfere with their right to vote in the next election.

The Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent also says in a new report released on Friday that holding an election during the COVID-19 pandemic could increase the threat of foreign interferen­ce because of the need to move more parts online.

But it expressed confidence in Elections Canada, saying: “While any modificati­ons to the electoral process have the potential to increase the cyber threat, we assess that the planned changes do not substantia­lly expand the cyber threat to Canada’s democratic process.”

The CSE report comes only weeks before Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is expected to kick off a federal election, sending Canadians to the polls for the second time since 2019.

Such an election will almost certainly look different than anything Canada has seen before because of the pandemic, with more activities and processes being moved online to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

One specific area of concern identified by the CSE was around an expected increase in the number of Canadians who vote by mail, with the agency warning foreign actors could try to use that as a way to undercut confidence in the election results.

“We assess that it is very likely that false informatio­n connecting voting by mail to voter fraud will circulate in Canada in relation to the next federal election,” according to the report.

The CSE nonetheles­s believes such “false narratives” will pale in comparison to the rampant allegation­s of voter fraud during last year’s U.S. presidenti­al election, which were often perpetuate­d by former president Donald Trump and his supporters.

And while the CSE believes most Canadians will experience some type of attempt to influence them, it says Canada “remains a lower-priority target for online foreign influence activity relative to some other countries.”

The fact Canada’s federal elections remain paper-based is also held up as a major reason for confidence along with what CSE describes as Elections Canada’s “robust” defences and several other measures adopted by the government in recent years.

The CSE report blames the majority of online attacks and threats to democratic processes in Canada and other parts of the world since 2015 on foreign government­s, with most perpetrate­d by actors within Russia, China and Iran.

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