A massive breach of Canadian voter data by a far-right separatist group is exposing what security experts say is a coordinated, cross-border assault on democratic institutions — one that bears striking resemblance to the Trump administration's aggressive push to seize American voter rolls.
In Alberta, a separatist-linked organization called the Centurion Project illegally obtained a database containing the names, home addresses and contact information of roughly 2.9 million voters, and the group's own organizer boasted that the software powering the operation had been presented to Donald Trump's White House, reported The Guardian.

Meanwhile, south of the border, Trump's Justice Department has sued 30 states and the District of Columbia for refusing to hand over their voter registration lists — a campaign that voting rights groups say is laying the groundwork for mass purges ahead of the November midterms – and the parallel is not lost on Canadian security officials.
"Data is a major force in modern politics, especially in the ways it can be leveraged," said Patrick Lennox, former manager of criminal intelligence for the RCMP's federal policing programs in Alberta. "Since Trump came back into power, he has destabilized democracy to the point where I don't think you can legitimately call it a democracy any more."
The Centurion Project's key architect, David Parker, is a veteran political organizer with documented ties to MAGA activists and far-right figures including Tucker Carlson. Parker has previously been fined by Elections Alberta for voting law violations, and the software underlying his voter-targeting app was developed by a U.S.-based company that has not been publicly identified.
“Parker is a shockingly effective political organizer. What he was doing was attempting to create a digital grassroots organizational tool, and on its face, there’s nothing wrong with that,” said Jen Gerson, an Alberta-based journalist. “But in order to populate the app that underlies the Centurion Project, he needed data.”
Security experts warn the breach may have already exposed Alberta's voter data to American data brokers operating under far weaker privacy protections than Canadian law provides, raising the prospect that foreign actors could exploit the information with impunity.
The Trump administration has also openly signaled support for Alberta's separatist movement as the 79-year-old president has repeatedly suggested Canada should become the 51st U.S. state. Before Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, academics documented a surge in narratives questioning that country's sovereignty, and experts say that language is now being deployed against Canada.
"The Americans would like us to be as weak as possible," said Brian McQuinn of the University of Regina. "They are advancing their own interests — when it comes to trade, when it comes to weakening us in any way they can."


