Thank you, Madam Chair and members.
This is my fifth appearance before this committee in 12 months. Each time, I have urged you to consider the fragile state of Canada's media industry and the importance of a strong public broadcaster, so we can ensure that Canadians continue to have access to reliable and credible news and information produced by Canadian journalists, so that they can continue to discover and celebrate Canadian creative talent, as well as the excellence of our amateur athletes, and so that Canadians can hear and connect with each other no matter where they live.
There are those who insist we don't need a public broadcaster anymore, that there are thousands of other choices, but are those choices operated by Canadians for Canadians? Are they dedicated to independent journalism with clear standards? Are they investing in Canadian programs? Are they committed to showcasing our musicians and our writers in English, French and eight indigenous languages?
Ninety years ago, a Conservative government made a choice: to invest public money to create a Canadian public broadcaster—to protect culture for Canadians. The threat then was from American radio stations spilling over the border.
Today, the threat is much greater. A flood of foreign services coming in, and 94% of all digital revenues flowing out of Canada to foreign companies. What is at risk is the survival of a Canadian-owned media and the information Canadians need.
Other countries continue to invest in their public media, and they invest much more than we do, an average of $78 per capita, more than double that in Canada.
CBC/Radio-Canada now costs Canadians $32 per year, less than $3 a month. In fact, now is precisely the time we should be investing more in public broadcasting, not less.
We have shared with you documents outlining some of the ways CBC/Radio-Canada serves Canadians.
Here's what's at stake: News and information the majority of Canadians trust; the largest investor in the creation of original Canadian programs; the most popular radio shows and podcasts; a digital platform used by 21 million Canadians each month for access to news with no paywall.
That is CBC/Radio-Canada. It is paid for by all Canadians in order to serve all Canadians, regardless of where they live or what language they speak. At a time when other Canadian media are cutting back; when Canadian writers, creators, musicians and athletes have fewer opportunities to get noticed and build a career, how does cutting public broadcasting actually make things better for anyone?
Ken Whyte is a conservative writer and the founding editor of the National Post. He recently said this about defunding CBC:
It might make some conservatives feel better emotionally...but it's not going to do anything for the culture of the country, for our understanding of Canada, for the ability of the various parts of the country to communicate with and understand one another, or even argue with one another. It's just going to make things worse.
I urge this committee to talk with Canadians. Talk with people in Trois-Rivières, St. Boniface, Prince Rupert, Charlottetown and Rankin Inlet who rely on CBC/Radio-Canada for their news. Talk with the Canadian authors who see their books become bestsellers after they've been profiled on Canada Reads and Le combat national des livres. Talk with Canadians who depend on us during a pandemic, wildfires or floods to find out what they need to know to protect their families.
I've had the privilege of speaking with Canadians across the country over the past six years. I know the majority love their public broadcaster. Some do not, and I've met with them too. We listen to their suggestions on how we can be better, putting journalists in communities where other media have left, launching local podcasts and finding new ways they can share their views about what's important to them. We will continue to transform our services to meet their needs, because we exist to serve all Canadians.
If I've learned one thing during my tenure, it is that CBC/Radio-Canada is a lifeline that links this vast country. Losing it will not make Canada better.
Thank you.