More than thirty-five organizations, experts, and civil society groups are calling on Canada’s federal leaders to close a major gap in privacy protection by bringing federal political parties under Canada’s privacy laws.
June 17, 2026 – In an open letter addressed to the Right Honourable Mark Carney, Prime Minister of Canada, and leaders of the Official Opposition and other federal political party leaders, signatories are urging Parliament to establish clear, enforceable privacy rules governing how political parties collect, use, and share Canadians’ personal information.
At present, federal political parties operate outside of Canada’s core privacy framework. Unlike hospitals, banks, schools, and government agencies, political parties are not subject to binding federal privacy law or independent oversight. This means they can collect highly sensitive personal information — including voters’ addresses, demographics, issue preferences, and inferred political beliefs — without the same legal safeguards that apply to other institutions.
80% of Canadians agree that federal political parties should follow the same privacy rules as businesses and public bodies. A recent political-party-enabled data breach of Alberta’s voter list–impacting close to 3 million Albertans–underscores these concerns. Despite this, major loopholes continue to allow federal political parties to collect and use Canadians’ personal data with little to no external accountability or independent oversight. Yet the federal government’s recent attempt to update our privacy laws, Bill C-36, does nothing to fix these loopholes.
The letter highlights growing concern that this gap undermines public trust in democratic institutions, particularly as federal political parties increasingly rely on large-scale data collection, digital targeting, and third-party data brokers to build detailed voter profiles.
Recent polling cited in the letter shows strong public support for reform, including:
The signatories argue that this is not simply a technical gap, but a democratic one. They warn that without clear protections and independent oversight, Canadians have no meaningful control over how their personal information is used in political campaigns.
In the letter, organizations and experts are calling on Parliament to act before the next federal election by:
Signatories include civil liberties organizations, digital rights advocates, and research and academic experts from across Canada.
Signed as Organizations: Apathy is Boring, BC Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA), BC Freedom of Information and Privacy Association (FIPA), Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA), Centre for Digital Rights, Democracy Watch, Fair Vote Canada, GoodBot, LeadNow, National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM), OpenMedia, Open North, PEN Canada, Public Interest Alberta (PIA).
Signed as Experts: Colin Bennett (University of Victoria), Vass Bednar (Canadian Shield Institute), Elizabeth Denham (former Information and Privacy Commissioner for the UK and British Columbia), Michael Geist (University of Ottawa), Blayne Haggart (Brock University), Guy T. Hoskins (Carleton University), Evan Light (University of Toronto), Fenwick McKelvey (Concordia University), Kate Robertson (Citizen Lab, Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto), Natasha Tusikov (York University), Kenneth Werbin (Wilfrid Laurier University), and Janet Wesselius (University of Alberta), Dwayne Winseck (Carleton University).
Organizations across Canada are encouraged to add their names to the letter and support stronger privacy protections for voters.
What you can do to support this campaign:
This campaign builds on growing public demand for accountability in how political parties handle personal data — and calls for privacy protections that match the standards already applied to other major institutions in Canada.