Why all the fuss about ? The CBC is government-funded media. It matters little if it鈥檚 69 per cent or 70 per cent It鈥檚 a simple fact that it is majority government funded.
It doesn鈥檛 mean it鈥檚 bad quality media. It doesn鈥檛 mean that its journalists are incompetent (some of the best journalists I鈥檝e met in my long career work for the CBC). It doesn鈥檛 mean that all of its shows are lousy. It doesn鈥檛 mean that it shouldn鈥檛 continue. It just means that it鈥檚 a government-owned creation of Parliament, not a private outfit.
The Canadian government provides our state-owned broadcaster over $1 billion a year in subsidies that were voted by Parliament. These are not public subscriptions, they鈥檙e government grants. The public pays its taxes and the government funds the CBC from those taxes. The public doesn鈥檛 otherwise have anything to do with it or a word to say about it.
Justin Trudeau was in full rhetorical flight Monday as he gave one of his overwrought drama teacher performances in defence of the CBC. The social media giant had decided to mention this government funding on CBC鈥檚 Twitter account, at the request of An OMG moment Trudeau wasn鈥檛 going to squander. He even accused Poilievre of being in league with American billionaires. Take THAT you sellout!
There have been nuances in the past from Twitter. The BBC received a similar 鈥済overnment-funded media鈥 moniker, which Twitter later changed to 鈥減ublicly funded media.鈥 Maybe something similar will be worked out for the CBC, which finds its appellation offensive because it lumps them in with state-controlled media in undemocratic regimes.
It would be a wasted opportunity if this issue were to be reduced to a Trudeau soliloquy versus a Poilievre grin. There is a substantive issue here that deserves to be aired, not dismissed. It鈥檚 very real and not a figment of the opposition leader鈥檚 imagination.
As someone who represented a different party, the CBC鈥檚 treatment of the Liberals is something I鈥檝e witnessed up close. In the run-up to the 2015 campaign, in which I鈥檇 be facing off against Stephen Harper and Trudeau, it was frustrating to say the least. Some of our best communications folks cautioned me (correctly) that it was a mug鈥檚 game to complain. You can鈥檛 beat the house! I鈥檇 have to put up and shut up.
Poilievre is apparently not willing to just take it. He鈥檚 fighting back but his methods and threats to defund can be so off-putting that any chance of discussing the matter serenely may be lost. Despite Trudeau鈥檚 chewing the scenery, there is something serious to discuss here and doing so could help Canadians get a better CBC.
I understand Poilievre鈥檚 frustrations because I鈥檝e experienced them first-hand. I just don鈥檛 share his methods. I don鈥檛 think the CBC should be defunded but I do think it could be improved. If this whole exercise opens up that possibility, Canadians could be the big winners.
I have searing memories of interventions by a small number of CBC/Radio-Canada reporters during the campaign, several of whom went on to become Liberal staffers.
Sour grapes? Nope, for me it鈥檚 long past. Real concern? Yep, because if it continues, the CBC could be on the chopping block and I believe that would be a great loss for our country.
When CBC President Catherine Tait decided to descend into the partisan political arena, targeting Poilievre personally, Trudeau should鈥檝e called her in to explain that she couldn鈥檛 continue in her job.
Think about that for a second. The same person who worked himself into a lather defending the CBC as an incorruptible, independant monument to fairness did nothing when the head of the CBC decided she was a politician and singled out the opposition leader.
In an interview with the Globe and Mail, Tait had had this to say:
鈥淭here is a lot of CBC bashing going on, somewhat stoked by the leader of the Opposition (Pierre Poilievre).鈥
. He accused her of being partisan and he was completely right. It was blatantly partisan. She had no business whatsoever engaging in politics. Period.
If anyone on a CBC pundit panel criticized Tait, I must鈥檝e missed it.
Both the government and the CBC should use this debate as an opportunity to hit 鈥渞efresh.鈥
A 鈥渂usiness as usual鈥 approach would help perpetuate a problem for politicians who aren鈥檛 Liberal. More importantly, it affects the fairness of our electoral process. It is government money, after all.
Twitter has taken to answering all questions from the media by sending an. It鈥檚 first year high school humour that says a lot about owner Elon Musk鈥檚 understanding of the importance of a free press. Musk has all the money in the world and the influence to go along with it. He also fails to understand that dictatorships from Moscow to Tehran, from Beijing to Pyongyang are cheering him on for a reason.
Defending a free press is essential in a world where democratic ideals and human rights are under greater pressure than at any time in nearly a century. Those assaults on democracy and liberty shouldn鈥檛 be enabled by someone whose success and fortune have been gained thanks to a free economy and freedom of speech.
That鈥檚 a debate worth having. Trudeau鈥檚 opportunistic emoting in defence of the CBC shouldn鈥檛 spare us a good hard look at this worthwhile Canadian institution. Destroying the CBC, as Poilievre has promised to do, would only deprive Canadians and the world of one more quality source of information at a time when hotheads and zealots already have too much sway.
Let鈥檚 defend the CBC while at the same time cleaning house and putting it on a more balanced footing. Canadians deserve no less.
Tom Mulcair was the leader of the federal New Democratic Party of Canada between 2012 and 2017.
Correction:
The Broadcasting Act requires CBC President to reside in Canada and Catherine Tait lives in Ottawa. A previous version of the column that suggested she ran the CBC from Brooklyn was incorrect.