Public Safety Minister Announces Imminent Arrival of Foreign Influence Registry
A foreign influence registry could be “coming soon” according to statements made by Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc after months of delays regarding legislation.
Minister LeBlanc spoke ahead of a cabinet meeting on April 30, telling reporters, “good news is it’s coming soon. I know it’s very exciting. It’s coming soon.”
He added that the federal government was looking at how to modernize the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) Act in order to give the intelligence agency various related authorities.
“This is part of our ongoing effort to strengthen legislation with respect to foreign interference,” Minister LeBlanc said.
The foreign influence registry proposal, if enacted, would force individuals acting on behalf of a foreign state to disclose their ties, a policy that has existed in countries like the United States and Australia for years.
“A foreign agent registry would be valuable for Canadians as a registrable activity would ensure foreign actors undertaking certain activities are operating in the interests of the Canadian public,” the RCMP said.
The note also acknowledged the problems with foreign agents and entities being able to exploit the democratic system and legal system in Canada in to advance the interests of other states.
“Unclear labelling of state-backed communications can produce public or media messaging that reinforces interests of adversarial states and circulates propaganda or disinformation that could either misdirect citizens or pollute the general media and information environment,” the note said.
On April 30, the Canadian Coalition for a Foreign Influence Transparency Registry, an association of groups from vulnerable multicultural communities in Canada, held a press conference calling for the immediate creation of a foreign influence registry.
“The Inquiry into Foreign Interference has clearly demonstrated the vulnerability of our democracy, and multicultural communities to the threat of foreign interference, intimidation and transnational repression,” the coalition’s convenor Gloria Fung said in a release.