Globalisation is taking a backseat to priorities such as national security and technological leadership, with U.S.-China relations consisting more of competition than cooperation, the retired founder of Taiwanese chipmaker TSMC said on Tuesday.
The International Democratic Union (IDU) is an international political organization that brings together far-right and conservative parties from around the world. It was founded in 1983 by prominent members of the British Conservative Party, including Margaret Thatcher, as well as other influential figures such as Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and U.S. President Ronald Reagan. In Canada today, several prominent politicians are affiliated with IDU: Andrew Scheer, Mike Roman, Pierre Poilievre and Erin O’Toole all belong to this group alongside Charles Koch of Koch Industries – a major American industrialist who has become one of the most powerful players in global politics due to his immense wealth and influence over both sides of the aisle in America’s two-party system. Koch funded Trump and the Republicans in excess of a billion dollars out to destroy democracy as Trump racks up indictments with over whelming evidence. Last week, along with former President of the United States, Donald Trump, a Republican operative and now former (apparently) assistant chairman to Stephen Harper’s International Democratic Union, Mike Roman, was indicted in Georgia along with other co-conspirators.
Canadians have less appetite for news and are less inclined to pay for news online, according to the latest findings from the 2023 Digital News Report survey by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford.
The Digital News Report, conducted by an international team of scholars, is one of the most comprehensive surveys about digital news consumption around the world. It’s based on a survey of more than 90,000 online news consumers in 46 countries, including Canada — covering half of the world’s population.
The new data on Canadian news habits shows payment for online news or access to paid services (via a library, for example), which had been growing slowly in recent years, slipped by four percentage points — from 15 per cent in 2022 to 11 per cent in 2023. This is the first decline since 2016, when Canadian data was first collected, and the lowest result since 2019.
Michael Harris, a Tyee contributing editor, is a highly awarded journalist and documentary maker. Author of Party of One, the bestselling exposé of the Harper government, his investigations have sparked four commissions of inquiry.
“If an election is worth winning, then there is someone willing to steal it.” — Mike Roman, Republican National Committee, and treasurer of the International Democratic Union
ANNOUNCEMENTS, EVENTS & MORE FROM TYEE AND SELECT PARTNERS
“Hi, it’s Sarah from the Conservative Party. Can the Conservative Party count on your support in the next federal election? Reply: Yes No”
This text, sent on July 9 at 4:29 p.m., landed on the cellphone of a person not on social media, and who does not tweet.
Reply “yes,” and the conversation begins. Reply “no” and you go into the Conservative database as a non-supporter — valuable information for the party either way. The text identified the sender as the Conservative Party. Perfectly legitimate. But how did the party get that cell number?
The same way they got mine I suppose. A few days later, the same message appeared on my iPhone. It all felt a little like a variation of something the country has seen before.
It brought to mind the Robocalls scandal that tainted the 2011 federal election, which delivered Stephen Harper’s Conservatives their only majority government. As someone who took a very close look at those dirty tricks, I was reminded of two other facts we should pay attention to as a new election looms.
One, most people know little or nothing about a global organization called the International Democratic Union, which is dedicated to getting right-wing parties elected around the world.
More about the International Democratic Union
The IDU was founded in London on June 24, 1983, by global conservative heavyweights, including former U.S. president and ex-CIA director George H.W. Bush, former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, former German chancellor Helmut Kohl and former French president Jacques Chirac. The group shared a common ideology: free enterprise, a strong military and a deep dislike of leftist political ideology.
Member parties of the IDU exchange policy ideas, assist each other in framing the political conversation and, of course, help their allies to win elections. There are regular meetings of the full IDU, and regional organizations. Officers are elected at party leaders’ meetings held every three or four years. A major event is held every four years to coincide with the Republican Party convention in the U.S. Members co-operate on foreign policy, and also share campaign techniques.
When then prime minister John Howard of Australia visited the U.S. in June 2002, he participated with then president Bush in an IDU meeting. During his visit he also addressed a joint meeting of the U.S. Congress, and held talks with key U.S. figures on economic and security matters.
According to the IDU website, “Countries can only develop their full potential if they develop recognizing the ideals of liberal democracy, freedom of the individual, and the need for economic growth to be based on individual initiative and free, competitive enterprise economies. The IDU has a clear role in a modern world, where today’s idea in one country is tomorrow’s policy in another.”
Parties wishing to join the International Democratic Union must share its values and be sponsored by at least one existing member. The decision to accept or reject a candidate for membership is made at a party leaders’ meeting.
Sir John Key, the former PM of New Zealand, and Howard, have both led the IDU. Both sit on the honorary advisory board, along with former U.K. prime minister David Cameron. These human assets carry immense insider knowledge that is invaluable in the IDU’s quest for political and ideological success around the world. – Michael Harris
And, two, the IDU’s new chairman is none other than Stephen Harper.
Let us commence to connect dots.
1) A dirty trick called robocalls, and the IDU
During the 2011 election, the Conservative party’s Constituent Information Management System provided useful lists for the dodgier elements of that year’s election campaign. Voter lists from CIMS were used to make robocalls supposedly coming from Elections Canada, the ones telling non-supporters of the Conservative Party that their polling booth had been moved. A burner phone, prepaid “vanilla” payment cards and a proxy IP server that masked the originating IP address were used in an attempt to suppress the Liberal vote.
Only one person, Michael Sona, a low-level Conservative campaign worker in Guelph, was convicted of violating election laws. But the judge publicly doubted Sona had acted alone.
A knowledgeable and well-placed source close to the party spoke to The Tyee on a not-for-attribution basis about those dark days.
“Doug Finley [who ran the Conservatives’ campaigns in 2004 and 2006] learned about the robocalls technique from friends at the International Democratic Union,” the source said. “He declared at the time that Michael Sona could not be guilty because he, Sona, had not been briefed on the technique. They kept the details secret and never told anyone the full story of how they did it. The International Democratic Union is an intelligence resource for conservative parties around the world. They trade secrets on voter suppression and other dirty tricks. Then they come back and have their dupes do the dirty work.”
The Tyee contacted IDU on Friday and received no response.
Senator Mike Duffy testified during his 2015 trial over expense claims that that Finley had said Sona couldn’t have organized the robocalls. Duffy testified Finley had said: “He hasn’t taken our courses, he wouldn’t know enough to do this.” (Duffy was acquitted.)
2) Doug Finley, the In-and-Out scandal, and Stephen Harper’s 2006 victory
Finley, closely associated with the IDU until his death in May 2013, was a key Conservative strategist and operative. He is widely credited with being the mastermind behind the federal Conservative breakthrough in 2004, and the party’s electoral victories in 2006 and 2008. Harper appointed Finley to the Senate while he was under active investigation by Elections Canada for violating the electoral rules — a sign that the PM was untroubled by any of Finley’s activities.
The case dogging Finley revolved around what came to be known as the In-and-Out scandal. During the 2006 election, riding funds were improperly channelled into national advertising, allowing the party to overspend on the election by more than a million dollars in the last days of the campaign. Some people, including journalist Glen McGregor, believe that it won the election for Harper.
Finley was eventually charged, along with three other senior party members. But the charges against these individuals were dropped. Under a negotiated deal, the Conservative Party and its fundraising arm pled guilty to exceeding spending limits and filing fraudulent election records. The CPC paid a fine of $230,198.
3) Learning voter suppression from the Republicans and their consultants
Jenni Byrne was Finley’s deputy and took over as the Conservative Party’s director of political operations in 2009. The party sent operatives to the U.S. to study how the Republican Party political machine works. Voter suppression was a routine dirty trick amongst U.S. politicians on the right. They understood that their chances of success went up when the number of voters went down. Historically, Democrats win when voter turnout is high, Republicans when it is low.
The Conservative Party of Canada is closely aligned with the U.S. Republican Party, and both are closely associated with the International Democratic Union. A case in point. In March 2012, the CBC reported that 14 Conservative MPs in Canada had signed on with a well-connected Republican company during the 2011 federal election, Front Porch Strategies. The party initially denied any involvement.
Front Porch Strategies, based in Columbus, Ohio, boasted that it won all 14 of the races it was associated with in Canada. Front Porch worked for the Conservative caucus, as well as individual MPs. Front Porch had worked for Republican presidential campaigns, as well as the Republican National Committee. It had also been active in trying to overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 ruling that gave American women the right to abortions without undue interference from government.
The Conservative Party also used the far-flung resources of the International Democratic Union, the largest organization of its kind on the planet. (The new prime minister of Britain, Boris Johnson, belongs to a party that is a member of the IDU.)
The IDU offers, for example, “election technology seminars” on a regular basis, and it conducts campaign seminars for politicians and party workers. “These involve exchanges of information on campaign technology, fund-raising techniques, opinion polling, advertising and campaign organization,” The Hill Times reported.
The Conservative Party of Canada has hosted the IDU’s standing committee on elections and campaigns in Ottawa. In March 2012, campaign directors from IDU members in 11 countries met in Ottawa.
Among the many Conservative Party of Canada politicians who have played key roles in the IDU, is former Conservative MP Tony Clement, who was elected its vice-chairman, serving in that capacity from 2011 until 2014. What might he know about campaign tactics taught at IDU events and do they include the fine points of voter suppression? Can’t say. Clement declined an interview for this piece.
4) Follow the money to the IDU, and meet Mike Roman
It is unclear who funds the IDU. But the connection to wealthy Republicans known for their financial support of conservative causes is clear. There is one outstanding example. The treasurer of the IDU is Mike Roman of the U.S. Republican Party.
Roman is also a former employee of the Koch Brothers. According to the New York Times, the billionaire siblings broke up their 25-person opposition research unit in April 2016 as an “efficiency measure.” According to Politico, Mike Roman ran that operation.
Before it was disbanded, the unit gathered intelligence on liberal political opponents, environmental groups and unions. Roman’s job was to oversee opposition research, deep investigations to uncover damaging information on opponents of the Republicans. Roman, who considered himself to be a private investigator, was paid $286,000 in 2016. He has kept a decidedly low profile.
5) The Kochs, and Stephen Harper’s cases of U.S. envy
Those mega-rich brothers who once employed IDU treasurer Roman invest deeply in ideological policy champions who serve their business aims. The Kochs contribute, for example, to one of Harper’s favourite organizations, the Fraser Institute. And they reportedly spent $20 million to get tax changes under Trump that saved them over a billion dollars. They also spent almost $900 million on policy and political battles heading into the 2016 presidential election that saw Trump triumph.
The Kochs were able to do this because tax-exempt non-profit groups in the U.S. can accept unlimited cash without exposing donors or facing spending restrictions, then flow it to political groups.
Harper tried to mimic that U.S. system when he was head of the National Citizens Coalition, a right-wing lobby group promoting conservative causes. Harper took the issue of unlimited spending for third-party organizations, which makes cash king in American politics, all the way to the Supreme Court in Canada when he was head of the NCC. He lost.
There is another tactic we’ve seen in the U.S. that Stephen Harper and his Conservatives also employed — claiming voter fraud in order to mess with voting.
Which brings us back to Mike Roman. After he left the Koch brothers’ intelligence operation, Roman showed up running candidate Donald Trump’s “election protection.” Roman oversaw poll-watching efforts and voter turnout, primarily in the key Electoral College state of Pennsylvania.
Weeks before the 2016 vote, Trump claimed without evidence that dead people and undocumented immigrants were voting in the hotly contested election. Afterwards, he attributed Hillary Clinton’s victory in the popular vote to fraudulent votes — three to five million of them. He said voter fraud was particularly rampant in Philadelphia, St. Louis and Chicago. No evidence for the claim was ever produced.
Trump nevertheless launched an investigation after winning the White House — which quickly folded. That’s in part because 44 states refused to hand over highly sensitive and politically useful information that the commission was requesting. That information included voters’ political party of choice and four digits of their social security numbers. Mississippi’s secretary of state, Delbert Hosemann, a Republican, suggested that the commission “Go jump in the Gulf of Mexico.”
In 2011, the Conservative Party of Canada also tried to claim voter fraud was a big problem in Canada — a ruse that gave justification for the Harper government to bring in the Fair Elections Act — a piece of legislation that critics claimed made it harder to vote and easier to cheat. The Trudeau government has since rescinded major parts of the Conservative legislation.
After the 2016 election, Roman quietly went to work for the White House as a special assistant, and director of special projects and research.
At the end of April 2018, Roman left the Trump administration. The Republican National Committee now reportedly is paying him $20,000 a month for “legal and compliance services.” That would be the Mike Roman who once wrote in a blog entry, “If an election is worth winning, then there is someone willing to steal it.”
6) The IDU under Stephen Harper
Harper resides in Calgary and is chairman and chief executive officer of Harper & Associates, a global consulting firm. In February 2018, in Madrid, Harper was elected chairman of the IDU. Formerly based in Oslo, the organization is now based in Munich. Harper did not respond to a request for an interview.
At the time of his election, Harper released a statement saying “I look forward to working with IDU leaders and members globally to strengthen relationships, advance our political values, and share best practices for campaigning and governing.”
The IDU website says Harper had overseen “a dramatic deepening of relations with India.” The right-wing, Hindu nationalist ruling BJP party joined the IDU in February 2016. The party saw a significant increase in support in the May 23 election, upping the number of seats in their majority government from 282 to 303. India is the world’s largest democracy, and as an IDU member it will be able to promote similar ideology around the world. (Could it be that there was a little more to Trudeau’s disastrous trip to India than a fashion faux pas?)
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu’s hard-right party, Likud, became the 73rd member of the IDU in 2018. The party’s initiation was marked by a ceremony at the Ronald Reagan Library in Simi Valley, California, presided over by Harper.
In July, the IDU congratulated member Nea Demokratia for that conservative party’s election win in Greece. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis immediately vowed to slash taxes and accept austerity measures imposed by the European Union.
As head of the IDU, Stephen Harper also personally congratulated Viktor Orbán, a man Maclean’s called “one of the most alarming right-wing populists” in Europe. Harper said that he and the IDU looked forward to working with Orbán, who has been widely criticized for his anti-immigrant policies and co-option of the courts and electoral system in Hungary. The European Union has just taken Hungary to the European Court of Justice at The Hague for passing legislation that makes it a “crime” to assist asylum seekers.
7) Stephen Harper, the IDU, the message on my phone and the coming election
Here in Canada, Andrew Scheer has an important ally in his quest for a majority government — the new chairman of the IDU, his old boss, Stephen Harper.
Harper is no longer in elected politics, but more political than ever. He has roasted the Trudeau government over its alleged animus against the West’s energy industry, claiming that it has no intention of building the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion that Canadians now own. He paid a “secret” visit to the White House without the courtesy of informing the Canadian government what he was doing there. And he has already penned fundraising emails for Andrew Scheer. As Alec Castonguay reported in L’actualite, Scheer rarely makes an important decision without consulting his former leader.
Meanwhile, the high-tech stalking of voters goes on in Canada. Responsive Marketing Group, the company whose name came up during the 2011 Robocall scandal, appears to be behind current texts to people in British Columbia and Ontario. The texts ask for people’s thoughts on pipelines and the carbon tax. The calls were traced back to iMarketing Solutions Inc., founded by the directors of RMG. iMarketing has offices in Toronto and New Mexico.
That raises an intriguing question. Have the Conservatives been sending texts through iMarketing without identifying who paid for the marketing? The party did something similar for the 2013 Saskatchewan push polls sent out by RackNine, the company that made the infamous robocalls in the 2011 election. In the Saskatchewan case two years later, the Conservatives at first denied that the messages were sent by the party. Once they were outed, the party fessed up and paid a $78,000 fine.
According to Elections Canada records, RMG worked on 97 Conservative campaigns across the country in 2011, as well as the national campaign. The company had even worked with CIMS as it was developed in 2003. Remember the late senator Finley discussed high in the piece? He called RMG “the best in the business.” The Conservatives won one of the ridings called by RMG by just 18 votes.
Suddenly, New Attention for List of Harper-Era Abuses
Global Affairs Canada officials are worried that foreign countries such as Russia or Saudi Arabia could manipulate Canadians with disinformation in the 2019 federal election using artificial intelligence. Divisive tactics include theft of private data for publication, fake news, personalized propaganda, micro-targeting ads and trolling.
A question, then, for you and me. Are Canadians about to see a bag of dirty tricks in the 2019 federal campaign, similar to what went on in the last U.S. election? Elections Canada rules can’t keep up with technology, especially if people are going to push the boundaries of what is legal. As events in the past have shown, the people pushing those boundaries often have more money and technology than election bureaucrats.
One more question, this for Andrew Scheer and Stephen Harper. That message on my cell leaves me wondering.
Steve and Andy, do you know who Sarah is and how she got my phone number?
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If you got to The Tyee by a search engine or a social media site, we’re glad you’re here. And we also want to warn you that how you access Canadian journalism online could be about to change. It’s a very big deal for independent news sites in Canada.
Canada recently passed the Online News Act, which would compel tech giants like Google and Facebook to compensate Canadian news organizations for the content that is widely shared on their platforms.
Google and Facebook are opposed to the new law, and they are doing everything they can to fight it, including threatening to block all Canadian news content on their platforms. Facebook has said they will start blocking news content within a matter of weeks.
Why does this matter? Social media platforms and search engines are how many people start their news reading journey and how a lot of new readers are introduced to professional, high-quality journalism. If news organizations are blocked from these platforms, what will fill the gap is information from non-news sources, including nefarious groups that put out misinformation. And it will stop news sites like The Tyee from getting introduced to new readers and supporters that we rely on to make our non-profit newsroom viable.
Our team of committed independent journalists show up every day to publish the best journalism about our region, and we make it freely available for all to read, without a paywall. We’re only able to do this because a few thousand readers have signed up to our Tyee Builders program and pay us an amount of their choosing.
As the foundations of the internet shift beneath us, we invite you to support quality Canadian journalism and join Tyee Builders at an amount that works for you. By doing so, you’ll be helping our independent journalism outlet sustain these major shocks to the news industry and continue to publish.
While a digital national currency does have the potential to mitigate key financial issues, we cannot ignore the democratic risks such a currency could introduce without safeguards.
Joe Biden is turning 80 soon. Russia’s Vladimir Putin is 70; India’s Narendra Modi is 72, while China’s Xi Jinping at 69 is the youngest of the rulers of the major world powers.None are planning to retire.Brazil just elected a 77-year-old as its new president, while Israel’s incoming prime minister is 73. As younger men, both Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Benjamin Netanyahu held power previously. Donald Trump, at age 76, is reportedly about to announce that he will seek the American presidency a second time in 2024.One reason for the gerontocracy is that those who assumed power at younger ages in non-democratic countries have amended constitutions and rules to allow unlimited terms of office. In Russia, Putin has ruled uninterrupted for 23 years, while in China, Xi has ensured unlimited years of rule for himself.
Most land that lost protections belongs to developers who gave suggestions directly to housing minister’s chief of staff
A high-ranking political staffer in Premier Doug Ford’s government “substantially controlled and directed” the process of removing protected areas from Ontario’s Greenbelt, giving “preferential treatment” to a group of developers, says a new provincial audit.
The explosive revelations were among the key findings of auditor general Bonnie Lysyk’s final report before her term ends in September. The Ford government announced in November 2022 it was dropping environmental protections in a huge swath of the Greenbelt, where it would allow residential development as part of a plan to address the housing affordability crisis. Lysyk’s office is one of several bodies that has been investigating the decision on the request of opposition leaders and members of the public.
Lysyk’s audit — done with the co-operation of the offices of Ford and Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing Steve Clark — revealed how Clark’s chief of staff played a significant role in the decision-making process.
“Direct access to the housing minister’s chief of staff resulted in certain prominent developers receiving preferential treatment,” Lysyk wrote in the audit. She also spoke to a deputy minister in the housing office who “believed” the chief of staff “was working under the authority of the housing minister and the premier’s office.”
Lysyk found that 92 per cent of the 3,000 hectares (about 7,400 acres) opened were parcels directly pointed out to the staffer by two prominent developers — the same two who went to court to fight her summons to participate in the audit, Michael Rice and Silvio De Gasperis. Ultimately, Lysyk was not able to question them prior to finalizing her report.
While the two developers are not named in the report, Lysyk confirmed in a press conference after its release that De Gasperis and Rice were who she was referencing when noting that developers that own the majority of protected lands opened are set to collectively see a property value increase of nearly $8.3 billion. This comes at great environmental cost, the report says: the Greenbelt changes will result in the loss of 1,000 acres of wetlands and woodlands and threaten at least 29 species at risk.
“Without the protection provided by the Greenbelt Plan, these natural features are at increased risk of being paved over, drained, cut down or polluted,” Lysyk writes.
MAKING WHOLE HOG BARBECUE IS not an easy undertaking. It’s time- and labor-intensive, and each step requires precision. Chop wood. Dig a pit. Build supports for the hog. Start a fire. Clean and season the hog. Roast the hog on a spit above wood coals. Then, cook low and slow for approximately nine hours.
This procedure means more than a meal to be enjoyed. It represents a long legacy of African-American pitmasters, one that is in danger of disappearing. Rocket scientist and pitmaster Dr. Howard Conyers is trying to change that.
Conyers grew up in South Carolina, five miles from where his family was enslaved prior to the Civil War. Living on land that his family had owned for generations, he enjoyed how whole hog barbecue brought his family together at occasions throughout the year. But Conyers, growing up with the custom, “took it for granted” that it would always be around. “My whole life was whole hog,” he says.
R.G. Richardson is an author who specializes in economics, markets, finance, money and banking topics. He has created a new series of Economic Interactive Notes which includes Financial Market terms and definitions with over 9900 quick links for easy access to charts, graphs and video presentations about the subject matter. This interactive guide allows users to pick and click through various search engines without having to type out their searches each time they need information on economic terminology past or present; this ensures that businesses and students are always up-to-date with the latest terminology available online today!
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Overall R G Richardsons Finance Interactive Dictionary is a great way of keeping up with global financial trends as well as providing educational resources relating specifically to business studies allowing everyone involved within these industries to access relevant data quickly easily accurately no matter what language they speak; it’s a truly revolutionary tool made possible thanks modern technology advancements like never seen before now accessible at our fingertips anytime anywhere we need them most – an invaluable asset indeed worth investing into if one wishes to understand how the current market works better prepare themselves future success within field whatever shape form may take next few years come to stay ahead competition same pace developments happen realtime.
This newsletter is called “Gastro’s Obscura’s Favorite Things.” We all know this. Sometimes, though, we end up writing about topics that fascinate us, but that we emphatically do not love. (For example, there was the time we wrote about how cults use food to control their members.)
Today’s newsletter is largely about planes. I spent years being terrified of flying, and I still tense up during turbulence. Flying is definitely not one of my favorite things. However, I do love unique restaurants.
A few years ago, as I was noodling around Google Maps, I spotted a tiny fork-and-knife symbol situated in the middle of what the map denoted as a small airfield. Perplexed, I tapped the icon, and it displayed rave reviews for a barbecue joint that had been left by locals, pilots, and planespotters. Many of the reviews included incredible pictures: not of the food, but of planes taking off and landing, snapped from inside the restaurant.
There are lots of these airfield restaurants across the United States. I found this out when I went down an online rabbit hole and found sites such as Fly2Lunch and forums compiling lists of the best restaurants to visit near or within small airfields. Many were aviation-themed, and functioned as meeting spots for both planespotters and pilots flying in from all over.
Today, your pilot on this journey through the country’s airfield restaurants is Bryan Peetz. Peetz flies a Van’s RV-10, builds flight training software for Boeing, and is passionate about both food and flight. We discussed the cuisine of airfield restaurants, why they exist, and the truth behind the “$100 hamburger.”
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