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You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/mar/27/brexit-groups-had-common-plan-to-avoid-election-spending-laws-says-wylie
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Brexit groups had 'common plan' to avoid election spending laws, says Wylie | Brexit groups had 'common plan' to avoid election spending laws, says Wylie |
(about 2 hours later) | |
The EU referendum was won through a fraud, the whistleblower Christopher Wylie has told MPs, accusing Vote Leave of improperly channelling money through a tech firm with links to Cambridge Analytica. | |
Wylie told a select committee that the pro-Brexit campaign had a “common plan” to use the network of companies to get around election spending laws and said he thought there “could have been a different outcome had there not been, in my view, cheating”. | |
“It makes me so angry, because a lot of people supported leave because they believe in the application of British law and British sovereignty. And to irrevocably alter the constitutional settlement of this country on fraud is a mutilation of the constitutional settlement of this country.” | |
Vote Leave has repeatedly denied allegations of collusion or deliberate overspending. | |
Wylie, who used to work for Cambridge Analytica, gave evidence in a near four-hour session before the digital, culture, media and sport select committee. He made a string of remarkable claims about Brexit and Cambridge Analytica, including that his predecessor, Dan Mursean, died mysteriously in a Kenyan hotel room in 2012 after a contract in the company turned sour. | |
Wylie said it was striking that Vote Leave and three other pro-Brexit groups – BeLeave, which targeted students; Veterans for Britain, and Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist party – all used the services of the little-known firm Aggregate IQ (AIQ) to help target voters online. | |
He told MPs that AIQ was effectively the Canadian arm of Cambridge Analytica/SCL, deriving the majority of its income by acting as a sub-contractor. He said AIQ had also worked with Cambridge Analytica on a failed campaign to discredit Muhammadu Buhari in the Nigerian presidential election, which included hacking into his emails and spreading disinformation via Islamophobic videos that showed people “with their throats being cut”. | |
“So, the first question that I have is: why?,” Wylie said. “Why is it that all of a sudden this company, that has never worked on anything but Cambridge Analytica projects, that had no public presence, somehow became the primary service provider to all of these supposedly independent and different campaign groups. | |
“When you look at the accumulation of evidence, I think it would be completely unreasonable to come to any other conclusion: this must be co-ordination, this must be a common purpose plan.” | |
Wylie was speaking the day after it was alleged that Vote Leave had broken electoral law by donating £625,000 to BeLeave, which in turn spent the money on Aggregate IQ. Vote Leave officially spent £6.77m, just below the £7m limit, but if BeLeave’s spending was taken into account it would breach that limit. | |
The allegations of collusion and overspending were also discussed by MPs in the Commons during an emergency debate attended by only a few Conservative MPs. Having secured the debate, the Liberal Democrat MP Tom Brake asked in his opening speech whether the government could be confident that nobody who worked for the Conservatives was going to be charged with electoral offences. Tory MPs, meanwhile, asked him whether he could be sure that the remain campaign had not overspent. | |
Jon Trickett, Labour’s shadow cabinet office minister, said it was necessary for the Electoral Commission to have all the resources available to complete its inquiry into spending by Vote Leave - and referenced the role of Boris Johnson and Michael Gove who fronted the winning out campaign. | |
“It’s because the Government is in it up to its neck. Two Cabinet ministers fronted the organisation. There they sit, week after week, the Bonnie and Clyde of Brexit,” Trickett told MPs. The Electoral Commission and if necessary the police should investigate the latest findings, Mr Trickett said, but at present the commission was under-resourced and lacked the necessary powers. | |
The minister present, Chloe Smith, who has responsibilty for electoral law, said she would not comment on the over spending and collusion allegations because they are under investigation. But she said the Electoral Commission had the resources it needed, and was set to underspend on its budget this year. | |
AIQ has denied it is linked to Cambridge Analytica. Jeff Silvester, chief operating officer of AggregateIQ, told the Times Colonist, that “AggregateIQ has never been, and is not a part of, Cambridge Analytica or SCL [parent firm of Cambridge]. AggregateIQ has never entered into a contract with Cambridge Analytica.” | |
However, Wylie told MPs while that technically true but the corporate structures were designed to be confusing and ensure that regulators could not always keep up with what was going on. | |
Wylie said that he was surprised that Dominic Cummings, Vote Leave’s campaign director, had discovered Aggregate IQ, which did not have its own website. He said he had one meeting with Cummings in late 2015, when he made an unsuccesful pitch for work. “Data was really important for Dom,” Wylie said, and he noted that Cummings was aware of both Cambridge Analytica and its principal backer, right wing US hedge fund billionaire and Donald Trump supporter Robert Mercer. | |
Cummings responded during the hearing by writing in a blog posting that Wylie was a “fantasist-charlatan”. When that was put to Wylie by a member of the committee, Chris Matheson, Wylie said that his evidence had been “fact checked by the Guardian, the Observer, the New York Times, Channel 4 News and the ICO [the UK Information Commissioner]”. | |
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