Monday, February 3, 2014

Herr Harper: Master Of The Twitterverse



Given the Prime Minister's penchant for control, I suppose this story should come as no surprise, but does rather conspicuously give lie to his claim of running an open and transparent government, doesn't it?

OTTAWA - Pity the poor government tweet, nearly strangled in its cradle before limping into the Twitterverse.

Newly disclosed documents from Industry Canada show how teams of bureaucrats often work for weeks to sanitize each lowly tweet, in a medium that's supposed to thrive on spontaneity and informality.

Most 140-character tweets issued by the department are planned weeks in advance; edited by dozens of public servants; reviewed and revised by the minister's staff; and sanitized through a 12-step protocol, the documents indicate.

Insiders and experts say the result is about as far from the spirit of Twitter as you can get — and from a department that's supposed to be on the leading edge of new communications technologies.

The documents, obtained through the Access to Information Act, show such a high level of control that arrangements are made days in advance to have other government agencies re-tweet forthcoming Industry Canada tweets, because re-tweets are considered a key measure of success.

In turn, Industry Canada agrees to do the same for tweets from the Business Development Bank of Canada and others.

Formal policy for the department was set into a protocol last October, with a 12-step process that requires numerous approvals for each tweet from Industry Minister James Moore's office or from the office of Greg Rickford, the junior minister.

Public servants vet draft tweets for hashtags, syntax, policy compliance, retweeting, French translation and other factors. Policy generally precludes tweeting on weekends, and the minister's personal Twitter handle must be kept out of departmental tweets, though his name and title are often included.


6 comments:

  1. And Mr. Harper didn't know what was going on in the PMO? Sure.

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    1. Perhaps he needs a new twitter campaign to convince us of his ignorance, Owen.

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  2. As insane as this sounds (and it sounds really, really insane) I wonder how much of this bureaucracy is normal* for government communications to the public. The bit about French translations, especially.

    [*] Well, normal for the Harper government.

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    1. I would say that under this regime, Nicolas, it is Standard Operating Procedure.

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  3. This is absolutely insane and the is not a figure of speech.

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    1. I can't help but think of some of the more absurdist skits of Monty Python when I think of Harper's Ministry of Correct Thinking, Anon.

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