Minister's email to gay community sparks privacy complaints
Jason Kenney's office says email sent to people who had written to immigration minister
CBC News
Posted: Sep 25, 2012 5:24 AM ET
Last Updated: Sep 25, 2012 11:00 AM ET
People who received emails from Immigration Minister Jason Kenney's MP office are asking how Kenney or his staff knew about the recipients' sexual orientation or interest in lesbian and gay issues.
(Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)
Related
Related Stories
- Read the full text of Jason Kenney's mass email to gay and lesbian Canadians
- Study on when life begins gets Jason Kenney's support
- How parties 'identify' voters, and why it matters
- Elections Canada mulls regulating parties' voter databanks
- Privacy commissioner warns robocalls scandal raises privacy concerns
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
An email titled "LGBT Refugees from Iran" that was sent from Immigration Minister Jason Kenney's MP office has raised concerns about whether the private information of Canadians may be used for partisan purposes.
But although she finds reports of the email "troubling", the federal privacy commissioner's office says she doesn't have jurisdiction over what politicians do. People who make their political views public using online petitions or other forums run the risk that information may be used in ways they don't expect.
Last Friday, members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community were sent an email from Kenney extolling the government's handling of cases of lesbian and gay refugees from Iran.
Some of the recipients are wondering how Kenney knew to target them based on their sexual orientation or interest in LGBT issues.
"I just thought, 'My God, this is complete propaganda, how did he get my email? What the heck is going on here?'" said Datejie Green, who is from Toronto.
The email touted what Kenney called his government's strong record of defending gay and lesbian rights around the world.
"This is scary. This is actually really scary," Green said. "I wasn't just disturbed, I was frightened, because they're clearly stockpiling lists of particular constituencies of Canadians, for their propaganda."
Green, who is a health researcher, is also upset that the government is trying to "pinkwash" its activities — making them sound more gay and lesbian friendly than they really are.
She points to Kenney's recent cuts to refugee health programs, which she says have taken a direct toll on LGBT refugees who often need trauma counselling and basic medical care.
Several other Canadians also expressed anger about Kenney's missive on social media sites like Facebook.
Privacy concerns over personal data collection
Randall Garrison, the NDP critic for LGBT issues, told reporters after Monday's question period that if a clear explanation doesn't come from Kenney's office, his party may make a formal complaint with federal Privacy Commissioner Jennifer Stoddart.
"I think there's a serious privacy question here when the minister is obviously touching on a subject that's very sensitive to many people and connecting up sexual orientation with individual names and addresses," Garrison said. "I think we need a full explanation of how he put together that list."
Political parties fall outside the privacy laws, yet they amass huge amounts of highly personal information about citizens, including how they vote, their age, religious and ethnic backgrounds, and other details.
Stoddart has warned that Canadians have no legal rights when it comes to personal information collected by parties and held in databases for partisan use.
A spokesperson for the privacy commissioner's office calls the case "troubling," but added there is little they can do.
"Please note that, from the information we have available on this at this time (including your email), our office does not appear to have jurisdiction in this matter," wrote Stoddart's communication director, Anne Marie Hayden, in an email to CBC News. "Our office does not have jurisdiction over political parties under either the Privacy Act or the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA)."
Green has lodged a complaint with the privacy commissioner.
Email addresses may originate with online petition
Kenney's spokesperson said Monday the email was a "response to individuals who have communicated with our office about gay refugee issues."
Green says she never communicated with Kenney's office but she did sign an online petition at Change.org which generated an automatic email from her email account addressed to "Jason Kenney and the Department of Citizenship & Immigration Canada."
A senior source in Kenney's office said Tuesday the government did not mine petitions or other forms of mass communication to get the emails of LGBT Canadians.
The source said everyone on the email list had written to the immigration minister in an email to his MP's office: the same address from which Friday's message was sent. The source said it's possible some people signed an online letter campaign that automatically generates an email from the recipient's email address.
"If you wrote to us on an issue we wrote you back," the source said. "We didn't go out proactively looking for people's email addresses."
Green insists the petition was directed at Kenney in his role as minister because it was about a deportation, and she says Kenney's office never wrote her back about her deportation concern.
Treasury Board guidelines for information sharing in the federal government stipulate that a minister cannot use personal information that is sent to him in his capacity as minister for MP or party purposes.
Meanwhile, the petition site Change.org states in its privacy policy: "Please do not post any personal information in any public forum of Change.org which you expect to remain private, including, but not limited to, any personal information and/or campaign activity information."
with files from Louise ElliottShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- U.K. attack suspects were focus of past security probes
- WARNING: This story contains graphic content. Two men accused of butchering a British soldier had featured in previous investigations by security services, a British official said, as investigators tried to determine whether the men were part of a wider radical Islamic plot. more »
- Neil Macdonald: Harper no Obama when it comes to dealing with scandals
- Beset by three so-called scandals at the moment, Barack Obama has been meeting his accusers and the press head on, Neil Macdonald writes. The same cannot be said for how Stephen Harper operates. more »
- Needed: New approaches to defuse 'suicide contagion' among teens
- Mental health experts say we need to find new ways to refer to and discuss suicide, particularly now that a large medical study has confirmed that teens are more susceptible to the idea if they know a schoolmate who died that way. more »
- 2nd suspect in Tim Bosma case now in court for murder charge
- A second man arrested in the death of Tim Bosma, a Hamilton husband and father who disappeared after taking two men on a test drive of his pickup truck, has arrived in court to face a charge of first-degree murder. more »
Must Watch
Latest Canada News Headlines
- RCMP moving to freeze assets in widening SNC-Lavalin probe
- The RCMP is moving to freeze millions of dollars in bank accounts and real estate holdings in Montreal and Florida as part of its expanding probe into Canadian engineering firm SNC-Lavalin. more »
- B.C. teen saves pet dog in 'terrifying' cougar attack
- A teenager who says he heard a horrible "scream" from his beloved black labrador outside the family home in Belcarra, B.C., looked out his window and then went into action to save the dog from a vicious cougar. more »
- RCMP Google Doodle salutes 140 years of Mounties
- Google Canada has marked the 140th anniversary of the founding of the North-West Mounted Police, the force that would later merge with the Dominion Police to become the RCMP. more »
- Man in chained-teen case pleads guilty to sex assault, kidnapping
- A man accused of chaining up a teenager and sexually assaulting him last fall at a home in rural Nova Scotia has pleaded guilty to some of the charges against him. more »
The National
The Current
- Politics in the Classroom May. 23, 2013 9:35 AM We visit a place where the rhymes of Dr. Seuss are thought too politically shrill to be heard in a classroom in British Columbia.
- 2nd suspect in Tim Bosma case now in court for murder charge
- 2nd suspect named in Tim Bosma slaying
- U.K. attack suspects were focus of past security probes
- Mike Duffy's primary home not P.E.I., unedited Senate report says
- Killing near London barracks probed as 'terror' act
- Neil Macdonald: Harper no Obama when it comes to dealing with scandals
- Senators' Alfredsson on defeating Penguins: 'Probably not'
- 1.3 million Montrealers face boil water advisory
- Man in chained-teen case pleads guilty to sex assault, kidnapping

