In 2016, Carl Miller of
Demos has said that, while the "digital world" has been "democratizing", he believes that sites such as
The Canary, which reflect a single worldview, cut down on dissenting information and are likely to make people "even angrier, more outraged, more certain that that people we disagree with are evil ... which isn't good for reasoned, civil debate." In July 2017,
Len McCluskey, the general secretary of
Unite the Union, said to the
Morning Star: "The media needs regulating, the control of information shouldn't be in the hands of a few billionaires.
Alternative media needs supporting ... . But I'd support everything that chips away at
Establishment control of the narrative —
The Canary, the
Skwawkbox, all of it." In September 2017,
Nick Robinson of the
BBC listed the website, along with
right-wing sites such as
Westmonster, among alternative news sites waging a "guerrilla war" against the
BBC to promote an
anti-establishment agenda. Drew Rose,
The Canarys director of operations, responded that "Nick Robinson's analogy that we are waging a 'guerrilla war' is apt – but it's not the war he suggests. ... For years now, swaths of the population have been ignored or otherwise failed by the established media. We're fighting to serve those people. We're doing that by helping to build a more diverse media operating outside of the establishment."
Allegations of antisemitism In early 2019, the campaign organisation
Stop Funding Fake News (SFFN) described
The Canary as promoting
conspiracy theories, defending
antisemitism, and publishing
fake news. SFFN launched a campaign to pressure advertisers not to allow their ads to run on certain websites. SFFN persuaded
Macmillan Cancer Support to suspend advertising on
The Canary while it reviewed online ad placement. Then-MP
Chris Williamson described the SFFN's campaign against
The Canary as "sinister". In March 2020, advertising for
Tom Stoppard's play
Leopoldstadt, which is about the legacy of
the Holocaust, was removed from
The Canary after allegations of antisemitism from SFFN. In January 2021,
Antisemitism and the Alternative Media, a report by Daniel Allington and Tanvi Joshi, academics at
King's College London, commissioned by
John Mann, Baron Mann, the UK government's independent advisor on antisemitism, stated that
The Canary, alongside
The Skwawkbox, "promote[s] a negative view of Jews" In response, the press regulator Impress began a preliminary investigation into both websites, reviewing 41 articles and one tweet from the two publications to assess whether they were in breach of the Impress Standards Code Clause on discrimination. In November 2021, Impress released its findings that the material that they reviewed was "not sensationalist and does not use language that is likely to provoke hatred or put a person or group in fear, nor does it appear to be intended to have that effect. Those that disagree with the Publisher's views on subjects such as Zionism may find these views offensive, adversarial or provocative but this in and of itself does not rise to the level of threat to, or targeting of, persons or groups on the basis of their protected characteristics as envisaged by the Code." ==Notable articles==