Asked by Lord Tyler To ask Her Majesty’s Government whether
they will conduct an investigation into alleged Russian
interference in the European Union referendum, including the
Leave.EU campaign. Lord Young of Cookham (Con) My Lords, the
Electoral Commission is the independent regulatory body responsible
for ensuring that elections and referendums are run effectively and
in accordance...Request free trial
Asked by
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To ask Her Majesty’s Government whether they will conduct an
investigation into alleged Russian interference in the
European Union referendum, including the Leave.EU campaign.
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(Con)
My Lords, the Electoral Commission is the independent
regulatory body responsible for ensuring that elections and
referendums are run effectively and in accordance with the
law. The Government are committed to defending the UK from
all forms of malign foreign state interference, whether from
Russia or from any other state. To date, however, we have not
seen evidence of successful interference in UK democratic
processes by any foreign Government, but we remain vigilant.
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(LD)
My Lords, do the Government not recognise that this piecemeal
approach is potentially quite dangerous? Given that it is the
considered judgment of the chairman of the DCMS Select
Committee—the Minister’s Conservative colleague—that the
leaders of the Leave.EU campaign have been lying, and given
that there is ever-rising evidence of illegality, with even
Mr Banks admitting that there was Russian collusion in the
leave campaign, is it not now urgent that the Government
should authorise a comprehensive investigation into what
exactly happened? After all, this calls into question the
very marginal outcome of the referendum, where for every 17
people who voted leave, 16 voted to remain. Does that not, in
turn, raise real questions about the whole Brexit process?
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On the first question, the noble Lord will know that it is
for the Electoral Commission to investigate any alleged
irregularities concerning the referendum. It has already
published a decision on Leave.EU and fined that body £70,000.
Investigations continue into allegations that Vote Leave
avoided the cap on election expenditure on the referendum by
channelling resources into another, linked organisation, and
that is a matter for the Electoral Commission to resolve. As
far as the outcome is concerned, 1.3 million more people
voted to leave than to remain, and I am not sure that one can
attribute that fairly substantial margin to the activities of
the Russian bots or, indeed, any other outside agencies.
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(Lab)
My Lords, there is absolutely no doubt that the Russians are
behaving in a dangerous and threatening way in cyberspace: we
know that and it is a real threat to Europe. The noble Lord
was no doubt celebrating yesterday the victory of 203 years
ago, when we thrashed the French, in conjunction with the
Prussians, at Waterloo; and the victory of 100 years ago this
week, when, with the French, we thrashed the Germans at the
second Battle of the Marne. We have expended a huge amount of
blood and treasure on European security. Does the Minister
not believe, in view of that, that the decision on Galileo is
quite extraordinary?
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If I may focus on the first part of the noble Lord’s
question, which is about Russian involvement in covert
activities, he may know that the Intelligence and Security
Committee, on which two noble Lords sit, is currently
investigating Russian involvement in the 2016 referendum and
the 2017 general election. It makes sense to allow that
important inquiry to be completed, and then we will have a
clearer view of the impact, if any, of Russian involvement in
the election, which is the subject of this Question. So far
as Galileo is concerned, I commend the noble Lord’s ingenuity
but I have listened to fellow Ministers give very adequate
answers on Galileo and I will not attempt to rise to that
level.
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(CB)
My Lords, will the Minister say whether the Government are
satisfied that the Electoral Commission has access to all the
rather complex means—obviously, I do not want to go into
intelligence matters in this House—that foreign Governments
have to interfere in our affairs? Is the Electoral Commission
really equipped to carry out that inquiry in all its aspects?
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The noble Lord makes a very good point in that, obviously, it
makes sense for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, not the
Electoral Commission, to have overall responsibility for our
relationship with Russia. It makes sense for the DCMS to have
overall responsibility for “fake news” and for the
Information Commissioner. It makes sense for the Cabinet
Office to have overall responsibility for electoral law and a
dialogue with the Electoral Commission. Where all these
things come together, which I think is the noble Lord’s
point, clearly, we need a collective view. It makes sense to
await the outcome of the ISC inquiry that I mentioned a few
moments ago, the DCMS inquiry into fake news that is
currently under way, and the Electoral Commission inquiries
into the referendum campaigns. When we have all that, we can
stand back and see whether we have the right resources and
the right information in the right place and come up with a
collective view on the serious issue raised in the original
Question.
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(LD)
My Lords—
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(Lab)
My Lords—
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The Minister of State, Ministry of Defence (Earl Howe)
(Con)
My Lords, it is the turn of the Liberal Democrats.
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My Lords, Cambridge Analytica was using so-called online
political microtargeting, which involves collecting, often
illicitly, huge amounts of personal data, creating personal
profiles for voters and delivering specifically tailored,
often false messages. Irrespective of the question of
expenses—and I have no doubt that this could form part of the
many inquiries that the Minister has mentioned—is this not
exactly the kind of secret online targeting which is a threat
to our democracy? Should it not be made transparent and be
highly regulated under our electoral law?
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The specific case that the noble Lord mentions—the alleged
misuse of data provided by Facebook to Cambridge Analytica—is
currently being investigated by the Information Commissioner.
So far as the impact of social media is concerned, research
shows that social media consistently ranks as one of the
least trustworthy sources of information—along with
politicians. By contrast, the public continue to see national
and regional television, news websites and broadsheets as the
most reliable sources of news. This may help put in context
the concern just expressed by the noble Lord.
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