In 2019 the European Union and U.S. Democratic Presidential Candidate Elizabeth Warren issued proposals that would regulate Facebook, Google and Amazon. Senator Warren proposed that the U.S. government should designate tech companies who have global revenue of over $25 billion as “platform utilities" and break them up into smaller companies. Senator Warren argues that the companies have “bulldozed competition, used our private information for profit, and tilted the playing field against everyone else.” Lawmakers in the European Union proposed a set of rules which incl…
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Province/Territory
Response rates from 689 Communist voters.
71% Yes |
29% No |
71% Yes |
29% No |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 689 Communist voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 689 Communist voters.
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Unique answers from Communist voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@B2L42TM3mos3MO
No, we shouldn’t penalize success. Only if the government can prove monopoly and anti competition violations.
@B45SGLP4wks4W
Yes, especially the compagnies that lobby our governement officials and actively work to discredit local businesses or that try to penalize union workers and workers rights
@B244VCM4mos4MO
I don't think they should have been allowed to get to the point they are now. Little too late to backpedal. I think we should be focusing on things like Bell and Rogers as opposed to Amazon and Facebook
@8KGXB7R4yrs4Y
No, just heavily regulate and heavily enforce taxation and environmental protection laws.
@B4J3D6J2wks2W
The Canadian government should instead focus on large businesses within its own country instead: Bell, Rogers, Enmax, etc.
@B472DSF4wks4W
Yes, but only within the powers of the Canadian authority and ensuring ownership of Canadian representative companies.
@B4ND9T91wk1W
All corporations need to follow the laws of the countries that they operate in and follow anti-monopoly practices. Corporations that do not follow these laws should pay massive penalties.
@B4MGPPZ1wk1W
No. Previous efforts to break up corporations have only resulted in the board members and C-Suite getting more money by becoming the boards of multiple companies instead of one.
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