Conservative Party illegally collected voter ethnicity data, MPs told

26 January 2021, 14:34

A laptop
Investment scams 2020. Picture: PA

Information Commissioner Elizabeth Denham told MPs the data collected on 10 million voters about their ethnic origin and religion was unacceptable.

The Conservative Party’s collection of the personal data of 10 million voters around their ethnicity and religion was illegal, the Information Commissioner has told MPs.

Elizabeth Denham said the Conservatives had deleted the data following a recommendation by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) in a report last year.

Speaking to MPs on the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) sub-committee on online harms and disinformation, Ms Denham said it was unacceptable that the party had used people’s names to attempt to derive their ethnicity and religion.

She said: “In our audit work, where we looked at the practices of all political parties, our recommendation was for any kind of ethnicity data to be deleted and the Conservative Party – I’m told and we have evidence that the Conservative Party have destroyed or deleted that information.”

Ms Denham said the party had done this voluntarily, but it would have ordered it to destroy the data if it had not agreed to do so.

Pressed on the issue by SNP MP John Nicolson, Ms Denham said: “Religion and ethnicity are both – like health information – special category data that requires a higher standard for a legal basis to collect.

“So again, ethnicity is not an acceptable collection of data, there isn’t a legal basis that allows for the collection of that data.”

Asked to confirm if it was illegal, the Information Commissioner said: “It was illegal to collect the ethnicity data and that has been destroyed.”

Privacy campaigners responding to Ms Denham’s evidence said the ICO needed to do more to enforce rules around how political parties collect data on voters.

Jim Killock, executive director of the Open Rights Group, said: “The Conservative Party’s racial profiling of voters was illegal. Elizabeth Denham finally confirmed the unlawful nature of this profiling by the Conservative Party under pressure from MPs on the DCMS committee.

Social media apps on a phone
Elizabeth Denham revealed she does not use Facebook or WhatsApp (PA)

“Yet the ICO still has not explained what parties can and cannot do. Mass profiling of voters continues, even if this data has been removed. The ICO needs to act to stop unlawful profiling practices. That’s their job.”

During her appearance, Ms Denham also revealed she does not use Facebook or WhatsApp and said she understood user concerns about the trustworthiness of the platforms.

She told MPs that although a change to WhatsApp privacy policy and how it shares data with Facebook would not affect UK users, she understood why some had chosen to leave the service.

Many WhatsApp users had reacted with concern recently when it announced it was introducing an updated privacy policy and detailed how it shares some data with parent company Facebook and demanded users agree to continue using the app – many responded by leaving the service for rival apps.

WhatsApp has since clarified details of the update and pushed back the deadline for users to agree to the policy.

Ms Denham said she did not use Facebook “by choice” and used Signal – one of the apps which has seen a spike in new users since WhatsApp’s privacy announcement – for her “personal communications”.

“What’s really interesting about the WhatsApp announcement in ongoing sharing with Facebook is how many users voted with their virtual feet and left the platform to take up membership with Telegram or Signal which are end-to-end encrypted,” she said.

“I think it’s a bigger issue of trust. Users expect companies to maintain their trust and not to suddenly change the contract that they have with the users and I think it’s an example of users being concerned about the trustworthiness and the sustainability of the promises that are made to users.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

TikTok on a smartphone

TikTok to begin appeal against possible US ban

The Darktrace wesbite

Darktrace set to leave London Stock Exchange at end of September

An unidentified hacker in dark hoodie performing at a comupter

UK convenes nations for talks on global cybersecurity

Icons of social media apps, including Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and WhatsApp, are displayed on a mobile phone screen

Meta to begin training AI on public posts from UK Facebook and Instagram users

JLR Rover the Boston Dynamics robot dog (JLR/PA)

JLR’s new ‘Rover’ is a robotic dog employed to protect brand’s EV facility

The logo and name of the technology company OpenAI on a smarthpone

OpenAI unveils new models designed to think more before answering

A person looking at a mobile phone whose screen has been blurred

Government strengthens Online Safety Act to crack down on revenge porn

Vodafone and Three logos

Vodafone and Three merger could increase phone bills for millions, watchdog says

A mobile phone mast being photographed by a mobile phone

6G network at least a decade away, expert says

A sign for the London underground in central London.

Teenager arrested over Transport for London cyber attack

Cyber security

BT ‘logs 2,000 signals of potential cyber attacks every second’

ChatGPT website with pink lettering displayed on a screen

OpenAI in talks to raise funds at £115bn valuation – reports

Person typing on a laptop

UK data centres to be designated as ‘critical infrastructure’

A plaque outside the offices of the Data Protection Commission in Dublin

Irish watchdog launches probe into Google’s AI model

The technology giant said the growth of cloud computing and artificial intelligence was key to the increasing investment (Niall Carson/PA)

Amazon Web Services ‘to invest £8bn in UK over next five years’

The hands of a person on a laptop keyboard

Most people have no plan for digital assets upon death, Which? warns