Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Rejects Call For Five Per Cent Tax On Broadband Internet Services

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jun, 2017 12:48 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is shooting down a parliamentary committee's recommendation that Ottawa impose a five per cent tax on broadband Internet services as a way to "level the playing field" in Canada's rapidly evolving news industry.
     
    Liberal members of the Commons heritage committee released a long-awaited report Thursday with 20 recommendations aimed at helping the slumping media industry adapt to rapid technological change and shifting consumer habits.
     
    The majority report calls on Ottawa to apply the tax, levied on broadband Internet providers, to high-speed Internet services that allow for the streaming of music, movies and TV shows.
     
    Liberal members of the committee tried to sell the move as one that would create more fairness because the tax is already applied to satellite and cable TV services.
     
    But shortly after the report's release, Trudeau categorically rejected the idea.
     
    "We respect the independence of committees and Parliament and the work and the studies they do, but allow me to be clear: We're not raising taxes on the middle class — we're lowering them," Trudeau said in Montreal.
     
    "We're not going to be raising taxes on the middle class through an Internet broadband tax. That is not an idea we are taking on."
     
    The committee spent 15 months studying the ailing Canadian media industry, which has been steadily losing advertising revenue and market shares to online giants such as Facebook, Netflix and Google.
     
    "The amount of money that goes to Google and Facebook in news media is astounding and it is taking away from a limited pot (of advertising revenue)," Liberal MP and committee member Seamus O'Regan said in defence of the taxation idea. 
     
    "We are asking that any obligations on broadcast media apply to digital. That is levelling the playing field."
     
     
    Among its other recommendations, the report called for the publicly funded CBC to eliminate advertising on its digital platforms; media companies be permitted to deduct taxes on digital advertising on Canadian-owned platforms; and a five-year tax credit to compensate print outlets for a portion of their digital investments.
     
    The report also signalled the need to protect the fading presence of local news in Canada. One solution suggested the CBC make local news and programming a priority.
     
    "This is an emergency," O'Regan said of the fact fewer journalists than ever are keeping watch on important municipal issues. 
     
    "This is a crisis in our democracy."
     
    The Conservative members of the committee have introduced a report of their own, arguing that their Liberal counterparts are living in the past.
     
    Conservative MP Peter Van Loan tabled a dissenting report, which he described as being "very much in contrast" with the main document.
     
    "Overwhelmingly, we thought the recommendations of the majority on the committee were embracing an effort to turn back the clock to keep things the way they were," Van Loan said.
     
    "Essentially, to try and replicate the ways of the analog world in the new digital world we didn't think was practical. This world is changing, and change brings disruption."  
     
    Higher taxes and government control of the news are not the answer to the problem, he added.
     
     
    Liberal MP Hedy Fry, chair of the committee, said 131 witnesses, including media experts and academics, gave input for a report written as its authors struggled to keep up with the speed of the changing media landscape.
     
    "We found that, in fact, the ground was shifting so rapidly under us — every week there was something new happening," she said.
     
    "We had to call back witnesses to clarify some things that had happened since they testified to us."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada's First Whale Conceived And Born In Captivity Dies At Vancouver Aquarium

    Canada's First Whale Conceived And Born In Captivity Dies At Vancouver Aquarium
    VANCOUVER — The first beluga whale to be born in captivity in Canada has died at the Vancouver Aquarium.

    Canada's First Whale Conceived And Born In Captivity Dies At Vancouver Aquarium

    B.C. Police Won't Be Charged In Fatal Shooting Of Masked Man Outside Protest

    B.C. Police Won't Be Charged In Fatal Shooting Of Masked Man Outside Protest
    SURREY, B.C. — RCMP officers in Dawson Creek, B.C., who were involved in a fatal confrontation with a man wearing a mask have been cleared of any wrongdoing.

    B.C. Police Won't Be Charged In Fatal Shooting Of Masked Man Outside Protest

    Vancouver International South Asian Film Festival unveils its 2016 program

    Vancouver International South Asian Film Festival unveils its 2016 program
    The Vancouver International South Asian Film Festival recently unveiled VISAFF 2016’s program and campaign - Bollywood & Beyond 2016 at Siddhartha’s Indian Kitchen in Vancouver. 

    Vancouver International South Asian Film Festival unveils its 2016 program

    White Men Charged With Shoving Black Man Into Coffin In South Africa

    White Men Charged With Shoving Black Man Into Coffin In South Africa
    The pair is due to appear in court on Wednesday in South Africa's northeastern town of Middelburg, charged with assault and intent to cause grievous bodily harm, according to the court's clerk.

    White Men Charged With Shoving Black Man Into Coffin In South Africa

    Prominent Writers Sign Letter Demanding Probe Of UBC Firing Of Steven Galloway

    Prominent Writers Sign Letter Demanding Probe Of UBC Firing Of Steven Galloway
    The acclaimed Vancouver-based writer was fired from his position as head of the creative writing department in June following a months-long probe into allegations of misconduct.

    Prominent Writers Sign Letter Demanding Probe Of UBC Firing Of Steven Galloway

    Man Who Brutally Beat Wife, Her Daughter To Death Sentenced To Life In Prison

    Man Who Brutally Beat Wife, Her Daughter To Death Sentenced To Life In Prison
    HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia man who used a claw hammer and bat to kill his common-law wife and her daughter in 2013 was sentenced today to life in prison without chance of parole for 18 years.

    Man Who Brutally Beat Wife, Her Daughter To Death Sentenced To Life In Prison