Home / OPEN LETTER to the Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation from civil society organizations and individuals opposing "National Sprint" consultation on AI strategy

OPEN LETTER to the Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation from civil society organizations and individuals opposing “National Sprint” consultation on AI strategy

The Honourable Mélanie Joly
Minister of Industry
House of Commons
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0A6

The Honourable Evan Solomon
Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation
House of Commons
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0A6

Government of Canada AI Strategy Task Force
Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada


Dear Minister Joly, Minister Solomon, and Members of the Government of Canada AI Strategy Task Force, 

Re: Civil Society and Human Rights Groups Reject “National Sprint” on AI Strategy

We, the undersigned civil society, human rights, and civil liberties organizations, academics, advocates, and representatives of equity-seeking communities, write to protest and reject the deeply misguided and wrongheaded approach to public consultation demonstrated by the government’s thirty-day “national sprint” on Canada’s artificial intelligence (“AI”) strategy.

We call on Minister Joly, Minister Solomon, and Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (“ISED”) to do the following:

  1. Extend the consultation deadline to February 2, 2026;
  2. Reconstitute the Task Force into a more equitably representative one that is equipped to confront the ongoing threats of AI to people and communities; and
  3. Rewrite the survey into a more legitimate and unbiased consultation instrument.

The current consultation process suggests serious disregard for the Canadian public’s known and wide-ranging concerns about the demonstrated risks and harms of technologies currently classified as AI. This impression arises from the contrived urgency imposed by the short timeline for submitting informed views on a topic as complex and consequential as AI; the leading language, predetermined framing, and prioritization of business and economic interests in the associated survey; and the lack of human rights, civil liberties, and similar representatives on the AI Strategy Task Force (the “Task Force”).

Not all signatories of this letter may agree on every point below or share identical positions regarding AI-related issues or how such issues should be tackled; however, we are united in opposition to this consultation process. We jointly refuse to participate in and validate what appears to be a disingenuous attempt to claim public legitimacy for an outcome already decided from behind closed doors.

Minister Solomon has stated he intends to depart from “over-indexing” on harm prevention when it comes to AI. This suggests a troubling lack of understanding of the wide-ranging and well documented harms these technologies pose, which any meaningful national strategy would need to take into account.

While AI may have beneficial impacts in specific use cases, the question is not whether a particular technology has any use at all, but whether its deployment justifies the cost—whether human, environmental, or democratic. That is a complex, multifaceted, and interdisciplinary question, responding to which with meaningful written input requires more than a thirty-day window on short notice.

Specifically, below is a non-exhaustive list of some of the many known negative impacts, human rights violations, human psychological costs, and society-wide risks of unregulated deployment of various AI-based technologies that have already emerged to date, with particular focus on generative AI and algorithmic decision-making systems:

In this era of AI’s demonstrated detriment to society and historically marginalized populations, applying a “move fast and break things” ethos to a “national strategy” flies in the face of any principled commitment to responsible AI regulation, human rights, societal justice, democratic participation, or building trust with civil society. Polls and surveys have suggested that at least half, and up to 85 per cent of, the people in Canada “see AI as a threat”, want government regulation over AI technologies, or are concerned with AI’s societal and environmental impacts.

That the government would insist on undue haste without first meaningfully reckoning with the myriad repercussions above—or providing time for resource-constrained stakeholders to reckon with them in their submissions—is unconscionable. All the more so that it is precisely many of the vulnerable communities disproportionately harmed by AI who most lack representation on the Task Force.

We have been here before. Experts and advocates focused on human rights and AI, who have engaged with the government in good faith despite a similarly flawed consultation on the proposed Artificial Intelligence and Data Act (AIDA) in the now-expired Bill C-27, have had enough.

In light of all of the above, we reiterate our above call for Minister Joly, Minister Solomon, and ISED to:

  1. Extend the consultation deadline to February 2, 2026;
  2. Reconstitute the Task Force into a more equitably representative one that is equipped to confront the ongoing threats of AI to people and communities; and
  3. Rewrite the survey into a more legitimate and unbiased consultation instrument.

In the meantime, Canadian civil society rejects this pseudo-consultation as a facade for manufacturing consent for a harmful preordained agenda, and declines to participate.

We will instead be hosting an independent and separate process: the People’s Consultation on AI. If the Ministers, Task Force, and the rest of the Canadian government are truly invested in integrating informed and substantive views on AI from the public, submissions from participating organizations and/or individuals will be made available on February 2, 2026, on a publicly available website (the specific location of which will be announced in the upcoming months).

SIGNED BY:

Organizations

  1. Action Canada for Sexual Health and Rights
  2. Adrianne Yiu Coaching & Consulting
  3. Alliance du personnel professionnel et technique de la santé et des services sociaux du Québec (APTS)
  4. Amnesty International Canadian Section (English-speaking)
  5. Amnistie internationale Canada francophone
  6. Artificial Intelligence Monitor for Immigration in Canada and Internationally (AIMICI)
  7. British Columbia Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA)
  8. Canadian Anti-Stalking Association (CASA)
  9. Canadian Center for Women Empowerment
  10. Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
  11. Canadian Council of Muslim Women (CCMW)
  12. Canadian Friends Service Committee (Quakers)
  13. Centre for Civic Governance
  14. Centre for Climate Justice, University of British Columbia
  15. Centre for Free Expression
  16. Citizens for Public Justice
  17. DAWN Canada
  18. Disability Justice Network of Ontario
  19. Ending Sexual Violence Association of Canada
  20. Freedom of Information and Privacy Association
  21. International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group
  22. Just Peace Advocates/Mouvement Pour Une Paix Juste
  23. Ligue des droits et libertés
  24. NicheMTL
  25. OCASI – Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants
  26. OpenMedia
  27. PEN Canada
  28. Privacy & Access Council of Canada
  29. Réseau québécois de l’action communautaire autonome (RQ-ACA)
  30. SCFP 3535
  31. Show Up Toronto
  32. South Asian Legal Clinic of Ontario
  33. Start Point Organization
  34. Tech Workers Coalition Canada
  35. Technologists for Democracy
  36. The Canadian BDS Coalition and International BDS Allies
  37. The Centre for Community Organizations (COCo)
  38. Women’s Centre for Social Justice – WomenatthecentrE
  39. Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund (LEAF)
  40. Women’s Shelters Canada / Hebergement femmes Canada
  41. YWCA Canada

Individuals

  1. Adam Molnar, Associate Professor, University of Waterloo
  2. Aja Mason, Boreal Logic Inc
  3. Alana Lajoie-O’Malley, Dalhousie University
  4. Alayna Kolodziechuk, Director, initio Tech and Innovation Law Clinic at Schulich School of Law Dalhousie University
  5. Alberto Lusoli, Toronto Metropolitan University
  6. Alex Megelas, Concordia University Applied AI Institute
  7. Ana Brandusescu, McGill University
  8. Andrew Clement, Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto
  9. Andrew Do, OPEIU Tech Workers Union Local 1010
  10. Anis Rahman, Assistant Teaching Professor, Department of Communication, University of Washington, Seattle, United States
  11. Anne Pasek, Trent University
  12. Dr Aren Roukema
  13. Bhaskar Mitra, Independent Researcher
  14. Bill Hearn, HearnLaw
  15. Blayne Haggart, Professor of Political Science, Brock University
  16. Caitlin Heppner, PhD Candidate, University of Ottawa
  17. Carina Albrecht, Institute for Advanced Study
  18. Prof Christoph Becker, Faculty of Information, University of Toronto
  19. Claudia Fiore-Leduc
  20. Corina MacDonald, Concordia University
  21. Cynthia Khoo, Lawyer, Tekhnos Law / Senior Fellow, Citizen Lab
  22. Daniel J. Paré, Associate Professor, University of Ottawa
  23. Daniel Keyes, Department of English and Cultural Studies, University of British Columbia Okanagan
  24. David Bugaresti
  25. Derek Hrynyshyn
  26. Dori Do
  27. Astrida Neimanis, Department of English and Cultural Studies, UBC Okanagan
  28. Bita Amani, Queen’s University, Faculty of Law
  29. Elizabeth Block
  30. Emile Dirks, Senior Research Associate at The Citizen Lab
  31. Emily Truman, PhD, Research Program Coordinator and Data Analyst, Department of Communication, Media and Film, Faculty of Arts, University of Calgary
  32. Emily Veysey, University of New Brunswick
  33. Enda Brophy, School of Communication, Simon Fraser University
  34. Erin Whitmore, Consultant & Registered Social Worker
  35. Evan Light, Faculty of Information, University of Toronto
  36. evelyn tischer
  37. Fenwick McKelvey, Concordia University
  38. Francky Franck
  39. Gabrielle Lim
  40. Gideon Christian, University Research Chair (AI and Law), Faculty of Law, University of Calgary
  41. Gustavo Ferreira, Assistant Professor, teaching stream, University of Toronto
  42. Gwendolyn Blue, University of Calgary
  43. Hana Darling-Wolf, graduate student University of Toronto
  44. Heather McLeod-Kilmurray
  45. Heather Morrison
  46. Irina Ceric, Assistant Professor, University of Windsor Faculty of Law
  47. Jaigris Hodson, Royal Roads University
  48. Jamie Liew, University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law
  49. Jane Bailey, Full Professor, University of Ottawa Faculty of Law
  50. Jason Hannan, University of Winnipeg
  51. Jeff Doctor, Animikii Indigenous Technology
  52. Jeff Heydon, Wilfrid Laurier University
  53. Jennifer Pybus, York University
  54. Jennifer Raso, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, McGill University
  55. Jessica Dubé, IRSST
  56. Joanna Redden, Associate Professor Western University
  57. John Packer, Faculty of Law and Member, Human Rights Research and Education Centre, University of Ottawa
  58. Jonathan Wald, Centre for Engineering in Society, Concordia University
  59. Jorge Frozzini, UQAC
  60. Karen Smith, Associate Professor, Brock University
  61. Karine Gentelet, Professor, Université du Québec en Outaouais
  62. Katherine Reilly, Associate Professor, School of Communication, Simon Fraser University
  63. Katie Szilagyi, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Manitoba
  64. Kean Birch, Ontario Research Chair in Science Policy, York University
  65. Kenneth Werbin, Associate Professor, Wilfrid Laurier University
  66. Kit Chokly, PhD Student in Communication Studies, McGill University
  67. Kristen Thomasen, Senior Chair in Law, Robotics, and Society and Associate Professor, Windsor Law
  68. Léo Bourgeois, Junior Staff Lawyer, initio Technology and Innovation Law Clinic, Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University
  69. Leslie Regan Shade, Professor Emerita, Faculty of Information, University of Toronto
  70. Leslie Salgado, PhD Candidate University of Calgary
  71. Professor Lisa Austin, Jackman Faculty of Law, University of Toronto
  72. Lucie Guibault, Dalhousie University
  73. Lucy Suchman, Professor Emerita
  74. Luke Stark, Faculty of Information and Media Studies, Western University
  75. Madalyn Hay
  76. Marcel O’Gorman
  77. Marina Pavlovic, Associate Professor, University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law, Common Law Section
  78. Mark Cauchi, Department of Humanities, York University
  79. Martha Jackman, Professor emerita, Faculty oof Law, University of Ottawa
  80. Matthew Tegelberg, Associate Professor at York University
  81. Mél Hogan, Associate Professor, Film & Media Studies, Queen’s University
  82. Melissa Adler
  83. Natasha Goel, University of Toronto
  84. Natasha Malik, PhD Candidate at McMaster University
  85. Natasha Tusikov, Associate Professor, York University
  86. Nathaniel Laywine, York University
  87. Nicholas Fazio, York University
  88. Nick Gertler
  89. Noah Davis, initio Technology & Innovation Law Clinic
  90. Noura Aljizawi, Senior Researcher at the Citizen Lab, University of Toronto
  91. Ozgun Topak, Associate Professor, York University.
  92. Paris Marx, Tech Won’t Save Us
  93. Patrick McCurdy, Professor, University of Ottawa
  94. Phil Rose
  95. Prem Sylvester, Simon Fraser University
  96. Prof Valerie Steeves
  97. Renée Sieber, Professor, McGill University
  98. Robert W Gehl, Ontario Research Chair of Digital Governance for Social Justice, York University
  99. Roch Tassé , ex-national coordinator, International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group
  100. Ronald J. Deibert, O.C., O.O., Professor of Political Science and Director of the Citizen Lab, The Munk School, University of Toronto
  101. Rosel Kim, Lawyer
  102. Rowland Lorimer
  103. Ryan J Phillips
  104. Sara Bannerman, Canada Research Chair in Communication Policy and
    Governance, Professor, McMaster University
  105. Sawndra Skjerven
  106. Scott DeJong, Concordia University
  107. Shalaleh Rismani, McGill University
  108. Shoshana Magnet, Professor, University of Ottawa
  109. Siobhan O’Flynn, Assistant Professor, Teaching Stream, Canadian Studies Program, University of Toronto
  110. Sophie Toupin, Université Laval
  111. Stefanie Duguay, Associate Professor and Chair in Digital Intimacy, Gender and Sexuality
  112. Stuart Poyntz, Simon Fraser University
  113. Suzie Dunn, Assistant Professor, Dalhousie University Schulich School of Law, Director of the Law and Technology Institute
  114. Tamara Shepherd, Associate Professor, University of Calgary
  115. Thomas Wilson (MA student), SFU School of Communication
  116. Tracey P. Lauriault, Associate Professor, Critical Media and Big Data, School of Journalism and Communication, Carleton University
  117. Tracy Valcourt, Concordia University
  118. Ümit Kiziltan
  119. Vanessa T, Individual
  120. Vasanthi Venkatesh, Associate Professor Faculty of Law University of Windsor
  121. Vincent Wong, Assistant Professor University of Windsor
  122. Xavier Parent-Rocheleau, Associate Professor, HEC Montréal
  123. Yuan Stevens, Data & Society Research Institute; Independent Research Consultant and Advisor

CIVIL LIBERTIES CAN’T PROTECT THEMSELVES