Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

CBC head calls for a 'national conversation' on Conservatives' pledge to defund

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jan, 2025 05:18 PM
  • CBC head calls for a 'national conversation' on Conservatives' pledge to defund

With Donald Trump making "territorial claims," the new head of CBC says defunding the public broadcaster could erode a pillar of Canada's cultural identity.

Marie-Philippe Bouchard, CEO of CBC-Radio-Canada, is calling for a "national conversation" on the Conservative promise to defund, and is launching a tour to get it started.

She said in an interview it's important for Canadians to be equipped with the facts about the likely impacts of stripping away CBC's funding for English-language services.

She said they should consider how it would affect "not only the service that we provide but also the existence, sometimes the viability, of a lot of other pieces of our economy from a cultural and journalistic perspective, and how would that help Canadians as they face the world today."

That includes "discussions about tariffs, discussions about maybe territorial claims by the new American president."

She questioned whether it would help Canada to take away "that component of our identity."

Bouchard said she’s also "not sure we're having that conversation at the level that we should be having at this point, as we progress towards an election in 2025."

Asked whether she plans to initiate that conversation, Bouchard said she's appearing at a production industry conference later this week. "That’s the first piece of the plan to initiate these conversations," she said.

After that, Bouchard will tour Western Canada to engage with business and civic leaders, industry representatives, CBC audiences and employees.

She said the Conservative pledge to cut a billion dollars from CBC's government funding, and maintain only francophone news, wouldn’t work because there wouldn’t be enough money left to run a viable French-language service.

"Cutting a billion dollars out of the CBC appropriation would cripple both English and French services," she said. "It’s not possible mathematically to come to the conclusion that you can siphon out a billion dollars … and think that we can remain intact."

MORE National ARTICLES

CAF updates entry medical standards to aid recruitment efforts

CAF updates entry medical standards to aid recruitment efforts
The Canadian Armed Forces is no longer automatically disqualifying applicants with certain medical conditions such as allergies and ADHD, as it works to improve its numbers and grow the size of Canada's military.

CAF updates entry medical standards to aid recruitment efforts

Snowboarding Jan. 6 rioter still in B.C. custody after Trump pardon

Snowboarding Jan. 6 rioter still in B.C. custody after Trump pardon
An American man recently found guilty of rioting at the U.S. Capitol four years ago remains in immigration custody in British Columbia, even after being given a presidential pardon for his actions. But the lawyer for 32-year-old Anthony Vo says his client plans to drop his asylum claim in Canada and he expects to be returned to the United States, possibly as early as this week. 

Snowboarding Jan. 6 rioter still in B.C. custody after Trump pardon

Man charged with second-degree murder two years after Vancouver death

Man charged with second-degree murder two years after Vancouver death
A suspect has been charged with second-degree murder more than two years after a man was killed in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. A statement from Vancouver police says they were called on Jan. 17, 2023, to reports of a shooting inside the West Hotel rooming house. 

Man charged with second-degree murder two years after Vancouver death

B.C. union leader says 'high probability' of dispute in public sector contract talks

B.C. union leader says 'high probability' of dispute in public sector contract talks
Contract talks between the British Columbia government's unionized public sector workers start today with a union leader forecasting a difficult round of bargaining. B.C. General Employees' Union President Paul Finch says the contract for 34,000 provincial government workers expires March 31, but talks are starting earlier. 

B.C. union leader says 'high probability' of dispute in public sector contract talks

'Targeted' shooting first homicide of the year in Delta, B.C.: police

'Targeted' shooting first homicide of the year in Delta, B.C.: police
A man has died after being shot in what Delta police call a targeted attack. A statement from the Delta Police Department says officers are now treating the shooting of 29-year-old Delta resident Gurvinder Uppal as a homicide.

'Targeted' shooting first homicide of the year in Delta, B.C.: police

Sleeping driver leads to drugs, guns being seized: Mounties say

Sleeping driver leads to drugs, guns being seized: Mounties say
Police in Kamloops say they seized guns and a "significant" amounts of drugs after finding a man sleeping inside a running vehicle at a restaurant parking lot. A statement from the RCMP says officers saw "numerous weapons" in plain view as they approached the truck Monday to check on the driver.

Sleeping driver leads to drugs, guns being seized: Mounties say