Madam Chair, members of the committee, my name is Marie‑Philippe Bouchard, and I am the chief executive officer of TV5 Québec Canada, a Canadian independent not-for-profit broadcaster that operates two francophone channels, TV5 and Unis TV, under licence from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. These channels are available across Canada in cable companies' basic service packages, as well as on a streaming platform, TV5Unis. We are the audiovisual operator of the francophonie for Canada. Five years ago, we launched, with the support of our partner TV5MONDE, the global French-language streaming platform TV5MONDEplus, available in 200 countries and territories. Unis TV's mission is to forge ties between francophone minority communities and the regions of Quebec, and to reflect the richness and diversity of audiovisual creation from those communities.
As you may know, I was recently appointed by the Governor in Council to the position of president and CEO of CBC/Radio-Canada for a five-year term as of January 3, 2025. I am very honoured to have this opportunity to serve my fellow citizens as head of the public broadcaster.
For me, it will be like coming back home again, having spent almost 30 years at CBC/Radio‑Canada. I had the opportunity to work with great professionals for 12 years, in the law department and in regulatory affairs, in two corporate functions, supporting both English and French media. I had 10 years in French services news and current affairs, in both TV and radio, during which time I co-chaired and co-authored, with my colleague Esther Enkin of CBC News, an ambitious overhaul and enrichment of CBC/Radio‑Canada's journalistic standards and practices.
For the last six years of my time with the public broadcaster, I was part of the senior management team of French services, first as executive director of planning and then as general manager of digital services and of music. In each of those leadership roles, I co-piloted several collaborative transformation projects with my counterparts in English services.
I say this not to toot my own horn, although I am very proud of my service, but because I am aware that I was not a public figure up to now and that people may have a legitimate interest in knowing what experience I bring to the job of leading CBC/Radio‑Canada.
The organization has changed and has continued to transform since I left almost nine years ago. I know that. That's why I want to take the time to listen to employees, to stakeholders, and most importantly to Canadians, the users and the non-users of the various services CBC/Radio‑Canada provides.
Like any incoming CEO, I expect to spend my first weeks in the job listening and gathering and analyzing information so that the strategy we develop and the targets we set are meaningful to Canadians, are empowering to employees and are supportive of partners and stakeholders.
We are living in a fascinating time of changing media consumption needs and habits and evolving ways of producing and distributing content. These transformations and developments provide opportunities to improve service to citizens and support content creators. However, they are also fraught with risks and threats, particularly to our cultural sovereignty, to the plurality of voices and to the public's right to quality, verified, honest and relevant information, both at the local and regional levels and at the national and international levels.
That is why it is so important that the key players in our media environment, of which CBC/Radio-Canada is certainly a part, adapt and evolve to continue together to support the cultural and democratic life of the two official language communities and the indigenous communities that are present everywhere in Canada.
That is the challenge my team at TV5 Québec Canada meets head-on every day, and I will have the honour of continuing to do so with the CBC/Radio-Canada teams.
Thank you.