Steve Bannon absolved himself of any blame after Cambridge Analytica harvested the data of 50 million Facebook users.
- Steve Bannon has denied any knowledge of Cambridge Analytica allegedly using illegitimate Facebook data to target US voters, according to The Guardian.
- Bannon used to sit on Cambridge Analytica's board, but said any "dirty tricks" were down to the Oxbridge-educated Brits who ran its parent firm SCL Group.
- As Bannon made his comments, AP reported that special counsel Robert Mueller would probe Cambridge Analytica's ties to the Trump campaign.
Steve Bannon, the former White House chief strategist and Breitbart executive chairman, has claimed he had nothing to do with any alleged use of Facebook data to win the US presidential election for Donald Trump in 2016.
Bannon was referring to the role of political research firm Cambridge Analytica (CA) in helping Trump win the presidency in November that year.
The firm allegedly used data illegitimately scraped from Facebook to build "psychographic" profiles of American voters and target them with propaganda. Those allegations were first reported by The Observer.
Bannon, who was in charge of Trump's campaign at the time, is now pleading innocence at its use of illicitly gained data, according to The Guardian.
He told a conference in New York on Thursday that any "dirty tricks" were down to SCL Group, Cambridge Analytica's parent firm, and the British men who ran it.
He said: "That’s SCL [the parent company] ... that’s all staffed by British guys from Oxford and Cambridge. CA is the data scientists — the Guardian and the Observer tell you that in about the 10th paragraph."
Cambridge Analytica's key executives include Eton-educated CEO Alexander Nix, now suspended, Cambridge-educated managing director Mark Turnbull, and Cambridge-educated chief data officer Alexander Tayler.
According to the newspaper, Bannon also said: "I didn’t even know anything about the Facebook mining."
Bannon once sat on Cambridge Analytica's executive board through his connections to its pro-Trump primary funder, the hedge fund billionaire Robert Mercer. Bannon has even said that he named Cambridge Analytica.
Reports in 2016 suggested the Trump campaign paid Cambridge Analytica $5 million for its services in September alone that year, a significant increase from the $250,000 it paid one month earlier. It isn't clear what impact this had on Trump's campaign, but Cambridge Analytica boasted about its role in his success in an undercover video broadcast by Channel 4 this week.
Around the time Bannon was denying his knowledge of Cambridge Analytica's alleged activities, AP reported that special counsel Robert Mueller would investigate the firm's ties to Trump's campaign as part of his ongoing probe into Russian election interference.