Thank you, Madam Chair. I'm concerned about CPC-23, and I'll explain why, Madam Chair, having lived through what was a very difficult decade for public broadcasting.
When Mr. Harper was running the government, we saw a marked reduction in funding for journalism at CBC, and newsrooms closed right across the country. In smaller markets, where CBC, and CBC journalists, had served faithfully for many years, newsrooms were basically closed. In other cases, in larger markets, there was sort of a skeleton crew that was applied. That had a profound impact on CBC's ability to do the excellent work that it does as a public broadcaster.
I'm concerned about the idea that we would not have CBC as part of C-18 to start with because, fundamentally, what that might mean is that, if the next government in this country is going to do the same thing the Harper government did, we would see the same massive cuts in funding and in journalism from CBC serving the country, and there wouldn't be C-18 and that support from big tech. Our public broadcaster, a broadcaster that is respected across the country and around the world, would be receiving that death by a thousand cuts—cuts in funding for CBC journalism and no access to big tech funding either.
Of course, big tech vacuuming up all of the advertising revenue has an impact on CBC, as well as the vast majority of other news businesses across the country.
I'm concerned about CPC-23, and I won't be supporting it on that basis. I think it opens the door for what some Conservatives have mused on and the Conservative Party fundraises on, which is to kill CBC because it's the fair journalism that often puts the Conservatives in opposition. CBC has that solid, established reputation of journalism that often provokes a reaction from Conservatives.
I'm also concerned about clause 28 of the bill because what it does is provide additional conditions and regulations made by the Governor in Council. What that basically does is provide an opportunity for this government or a future government to impose additional conditions on CBC, and I'm not convinced that would always be used on a good-faith basis.
I don't believe that we should carry clause 28. I think we should be looking to remove that clause from the bill. I think what that would do is provide for CBC's independence. It's still subject to CRTC regulations and still subject to all the other provisions of the act, but it eliminates the possibility of a future cabinet saying, “Hey, we're going to impose a whole range of conditions,” and those conditions may be in a bad-faith way designed to strangle CBC.
There is no doubt that the vast majority of Canadians support the CBC. There is no doubt that the vast majority of Canadians respect the high standards of journalism that are set by the CBC. I think we have a duty as a committee to ensure that CBC has the ability to access the funding that big tech has been hoovering out of this country for years in the same way that all other journalists have the ability, but we also have to remove the potential for a future cabinet to say, “Hey, we're just going to provide that death by a thousand cuts to CBC so that our national public broadcaster is no longer on a sound footing.” We saw over a number of years how quickly journalism can be gutted at the CBC when a government, like the Harper government, cuts funding.
It is also important to talk about francophone journalists across Canada. In British Columbia, CBC/Radio‑Canada has excellent programs and journalists. This bilingualism in journalism is important across Canada.
The reality is that if we deprive the CBC of this potential funding from the tech giants and still give the Governor in Council, through section 28, the ability to change regulations very significantly and unilaterally, it risks taking us back to the days of the Harper government, which slashed funding to CBC/Radio‑Canada. Journalism suffered in newsrooms across the country, especially on the French side, where the number of journalists declined.
For this reason, I will vote against this amendment proposed by the Conservatives, and I am voting against clause 28 of the bill. It should be eliminated to avoid jeopardizing the future of CBC/Radio‑Canada.
Thank you.