Wednesday, January 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Says Party Not Turning Back On Social Media In Future Campaigns

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Mar, 2018 11:46 AM
    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau says he's not going to turn his back on social media for future campaigns at a time of deepening public concerns over the use of private Facebook data for political purposes.
     
     
    Speaking to reporters today in New Brunswick, the prime minister says the Liberals will continue to use social media as a way of connecting with people and getting their message out.
     
     
    But Trudeau insists they will always do it responsibly and he's calling on Internet companies to act responsibly as well.
     
     
    His comments come as Facebook faces a backlash following allegations that private data from 50 million of its users was improperly harvested by a voter-profiling company to help seal victories for Donald Trump's presidential campaign in the U.S. and in the U.K.'s Brexit referendum.
     
     
    Trudeau sidestepped a question on whether the Liberals would use Facebook data to target voters in the 2019 election campaign.
     
     
    This week, reports by The Canadian Press forced the Liberals to disclose that in 2016 their caucus research bureau awarded a $100,000 pilot project to the Canadian data scientist at the centre of the international uproar over Facebook users' data being inappropriately mined for political gain.
     
     
    The research bureau says that after seeing a sample of Christopher Wylie's services, they decided not to move forward.
     
     
     
     
    Wylie has insisted in media interviews that he not only played a key role in developing the data-crunching technique that helped seal 2016 election wins in the U.S. and the U.K., but that he also helped establish the Cambridge Analytica firm that he alleges deployed it.
     
     
    Political parties depend heavily on access to quality data about voters when fine-tuning their pitches and Wylie has argued that the profiling approach he helped create went too far. 
     
     
    Wylie has not been accused of any unethical activities or of breaking the law in Canada.
     
     
    His allegations have forced policy-makers on both sides of the Atlantic to wrestle with growing public concerns that data collected by Facebook and other social-media companies is being misused to influence elections.
     
     
    "There's no question that Facebook and other Internet giants wield an extraordinarily large amount of power and influence over modern society, over the lives of individual citizens," Trudeau said in Sussex, N.B.
     
     
    "And what we need is for those companies to assume the responsibilities that come with that power. This is something that I've brought up directly with my meetings with Facebook over the past couple of years."
     
     
    Earlier today, the all-party House of Commons ethics committee voted unanimously in favour of inviting Wylie, Facebook officials and the federal privacy commissioner to appear in front of them to discuss the privacy implications for Canada related to the Facebook revelations about Facebook.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Police Say The City's Sixth Homicide Of 2018 Was A Targeted Shooting

    Vancouver Police Say The City's Sixth Homicide Of 2018 Was A Targeted Shooting
    A 32-year-old Surrey man was found critically injured on a street in the city's Kerrisdale neighbourhood.

    Vancouver Police Say The City's Sixth Homicide Of 2018 Was A Targeted Shooting

    Wheels Up For India: Justin Trudeau Takes Wing On Trade Mission To India, Where Sikh Politics Loom

    Wheels Up For India: Justin Trudeau Takes Wing On Trade Mission To India, Where Sikh Politics Loom
    India is the world's second-largest country by population and one of the world's fastest growing economies -- one that's expected to overtake Great Britain later this year to become the fifth largest in the world.

    Wheels Up For India: Justin Trudeau Takes Wing On Trade Mission To India, Where Sikh Politics Loom

    B.C. Ride-hailing Report Makes 32 Recommendations To Pave Way For Regulations

    B.C. Ride-hailing Report Makes 32 Recommendations To Pave Way For Regulations
    An all-party committee in the British Columbia legislature is unanimous in supporting a provincewide plan for ride-hailing services in the province.  

    B.C. Ride-hailing Report Makes 32 Recommendations To Pave Way For Regulations

    Parole Board Rules Out Overnight Leaves For Balaclava Rapist Larry Takahashi

    Parole Board Rules Out Overnight Leaves For Balaclava Rapist Larry Takahashi
    Larry Takahashi is serving three life sentences for multiple counts of rape, aggravated sexual assault and other attacks on 23 women in the Edmonton area in the 1970s and '80s.

    Parole Board Rules Out Overnight Leaves For Balaclava Rapist Larry Takahashi

    B.C. Man Digs Out Moose Trapped Upside Down In Roadside Snowbank

    A logging truck driver in British Columbia was taken by surprise when he saw four legs sticking out of the snow off the side of a road.

    B.C. Man Digs Out Moose Trapped Upside Down In Roadside Snowbank

    Founding Member Of Nanaimo Search And Rescue Killed In Snowmobile Accident

    WHISTLER, B.C. — A volunteer search and rescue organization on Vancouver Island is mourning the loss of one of its founding members.

    Founding Member Of Nanaimo Search And Rescue Killed In Snowmobile Accident