Grocery and consumer product price fixing using digital surveillance of people’s shopping habits is an issue being taken on full-force by the federal NDP.
Already many Canadians have become accustomed to receiving digital coupons or discount offers for products they regularly purchase. Various pricing options are available to different customers based on location, shopping habits and income level (if known).
This practice has some Canadians paying more for some products than others, and/or the same customers paying different prices for the same products depending on how and when they shop and whether or not they engage digitally at the checkout.
This issue was launched by NDP Leader Avi Lewis in his first press conference in Ottawa today, since having become the new NDP Leader on March 29. His father Stephan Lewis passed away on March 31 (memorial coming up April 26), and Lewis is now getting back to his new political role.
The NDP’s approach will “speak to everyone who is suffering in this economy,” said Lewis today.
He targeted online shopping as allowing for digital surveillance “to be fuel for price gouging (that) is utterly unacceptable”.



