Saturday, December 20, 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

No indication Trump will back down on tariffs, but retaliating not the answer: Smith

No indication Trump will back down on tariffs, but retaliating not the answer: Smith
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, fresh off a weekend visit with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, says if Ottawa uses an energy embargo to combat Trump's promised tariffs, it would spark a "national unity crisis."

No indication Trump will back down on tariffs, but retaliating not the answer: Smith

Liberal leadership race: A look at the potential candidates

Liberal leadership race: A look at the potential candidates
Candidates must declare by Jan. 23 and pay a $350,000 fee to enter the race. The winner will be named on March 9. Here's a quick look at who's in and who's out.

Liberal leadership race: A look at the potential candidates

Thousands of school support workers off the job in Edmonton, nearby communities

Thousands of school support workers off the job in Edmonton, nearby communities
Education support workers began gathering under pitch-black pre-dawn skies in Edmonton and some nearby communities as a strike got underway.  The workers, bundled in coats and scarves and gripping signs, are calling for what they term fair wages from the Edmonton Public School Board and Sturgeon Public School Division. 

Thousands of school support workers off the job in Edmonton, nearby communities

Helicopter team rescues unconscious skier after fall at B.C.'s Mt. Cain

Helicopter team rescues unconscious skier after fall at B.C.'s Mt. Cain
A search and rescue team on Vancouver Island says it rescued a man who suffered a "serious fall" while skiing at Mt. Cain this weekend. Comox Valley Search & Rescue says in a post to social media that members responded to rescue the unconscious 35-year-old from the mountain's west bowl on Saturday.

Helicopter team rescues unconscious skier after fall at B.C.'s Mt. Cain

Canada, G7 leaders, denounce Venezuela's suppression of political opposition

Canada, G7 leaders, denounce Venezuela's suppression of political opposition
Canada is joining its closest allies in denouncing Venezuela's crackdown on democracy — the first G7 foreign policy statement since Canada began chairing the group this year. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was inaugurated Friday for a third six-year term, after a July election widely seen as illegitimate.

Canada, G7 leaders, denounce Venezuela's suppression of political opposition

Feds issue new COVID vaccine guidance, says provinces now responsible for buying them

Feds issue new COVID vaccine guidance, says provinces now responsible for buying them
Federal funding for COVID-19 vaccines will stop this year and the provinces and territories will be responsible for buying them, as well as determining the timing of the vaccinations, the Public Health Agency of Canada says. The agency published the information online on Friday, along with the National Advisory Committee on Immunization's COVID-19 vaccine guidance for 2025 through to the summer of 2026. 

Feds issue new COVID vaccine guidance, says provinces now responsible for buying them