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  • 2020-12-03 (xsd:date)
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  • Trudeau photo falsely linked to Dominion Voting fraud claims (en)
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  • Facebook posts claim that Elections Canada lied when it said it does not use Dominion Voting systems for federal polls, using a photo of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau voting with the company's technology as proof. The claim is false; the photo shows Trudeau voting during the Liberal Party of Canada leadership race in 2013, not a federal election, which uses paper ballots. Elections Canada just tried telling Canadians that these devices had not been used in Canadian elections. Well now we know that was just a lie, like everything these terrorists have said, claims a November 19, 2020 Facebook post which has been shared 1,400 times. Screenshot of the Facebook post taken on December 3, 2020 Other posts sharing the same photo can be found here and here . The posts were shared after US President Donald Trump falsely claimed that Dominion Voting machines led to massive fraud in the November presidential election, which he lost to Joe Biden. AFP Fact Check has debunked numerous false and misleading claims about the US ballot. Amid false claims of vote rigging by Dominion in the 2019 Canadian election, Elections Canada tweeted that the independent federal agency does not use Dominion Voting Systems. We use paper ballots counted by hand in front of scrutineers and have never used voting machines or electronic tabulators to count votes in our 100-year history. Although the Dominion ballot counting machines have never been used in a Canadian federal election, they have been utilized for local and provincial elections, which are not overseen by Elections Canada. Provincial elections are handled by an independent electoral commission, as in Ontario , and local elections are overseen by the municipal council, as in Toronto . Both the Liberal and Conservative parties have used Dominion to tabulate votes in their leadership races. The picture shared in the Facebook posts was taken during the 2013 Liberal Party leadership race and was published on Trudeau’s Flickr account. Screenshot taken on Flickr.com on December 3, 2020 The metadata on the Flickr page indicates that the picture was taken on April 9, 2013 and uploaded to the website the next day. The election took place on April 14, and Trudeau was elected as the Liberal party leader. He was not appointed prime minister until after the federal election of October 2015. There was no Liberal Party leadership race in 2019 and Trudeau retained the prime ministership after the October federal election, though his party lost its comfortable majority in the House of Commons . A close look at the photo shows the 2013 date on the screen Trudeau is holding, and on the paper form in front of him. Close up of the Flickr photo Liberal Party of Canada Senior Director of Communications Braeden Caley told AFP in an email that the picture shows Trudeau voting during the leadership race from his campaign office at the time in Toronto. Soros connection? The caption on the photo also falsely claims that philanthropist George Soros’s son was connected to the voting, saying, look at the guy in the back... George Soros son Alex. George Soros — a Hungarian-born American financier and philanthropist — has long been the target of right-wing and anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. AFP debunked a false article which claimed that he had been arrested for election interference in the United States. Caley said: The individuals seen behind Justin Trudeau are Omar Alghabra (currently a Member of Parliament, then a part of Trudeau’s 2013 Liberal leadership campaign) and Brett Thalmann (currently a senior official in the prime minister’s office, then a part of Trudeau’s 2013 Liberal leadership campaign). Alghabra is currently a Liberal Party of Canada Member of Parliament for Mississauga-Centre. Below is a visual comparison between the men in the background of the 2013 picture, Omar Alghabra and Brett Thalmann, and Alex Soros. Composite image comparing a screenshot of the man seen in the background of the 2013 picture (L) and a picture of Omar Alghabra (R) found on his Facebook page Composite image comparing a screenshot of the man seen in the background of the 2013 picture (L) and a picture of Alex Soros (R) found on his Facebook page Composite image comparing a screenshot of the man seen in the background of the 2013 picture (L) and a picture of Brett Thalmann (R) found on his Facebook page Composite image comparing a screenshot of the man seen in the background of the 2013 picture (L) and a picture of Alex Soros (R) found on his Facebook page Contacted by AFP to comment on the picture, Alghabra and Thalmann did not reply. (en)
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