FUSS: CBC ‘fact-checker’ gets his facts wrong

At all times, during an election period and beyond, the media must report accurate information and, when necessary, correct the record. For example, following the English-language federal leaders’ debate on April 17, CBC reporter Jonathon Gatehouse appeared on CBC News and “fact-checked” a statement by Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, who had referenced a study published by the Fraser Institute. Unfortunately, during the segment, Gatehouse got his facts wrong.

That’s the CBC’s job.

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Terry Newman: On election night, CBC shamelessly cheered on Mark Carney

During election night coverage, some CBC pundits dropped much of the pretense of impartiality as soon as an “at least Liberal minority” was predicted shortly after 10 p.m. ET. At this point, the national broadcaster’s hosts and commentators could breathe a sigh of relief that they wouldn’t be delivering their own eulogy.

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Kelly McParland: Carney thinks Canada is too weak to survive without the CBC

The 2025 federal election already has one big winner. Congratulations, CBC!

Barring a reversal of fortune, Liberal Leader Mark Carney saved the bacon of Canada’s natural broadcasting corporation when he announced that, should he remain prime minister after April 28, his government would not only keep the Crown corporation alive, it would raise its allowance until it reaches levels similar to those in Britain, Germany and France.

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Carney pledges $150M of your money to buy fealty with ‘underfunded’ CBC

Liberal Leader Mark Carney said on Friday that his government would provide an initial $150-million annual funding increase to CBC and Radio-Canada as part of a new mandate for the public broadcaster.

“When we compare ourselves to the U.K., France or Germany, we see that our public broadcaster is underfunded,” Carney said in French during a campaign stop in Montreal. “That has to change.”

That initial funding top-up could rise, Carney said.

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‘NO APPETITE’: Canadians reject proposed hike in CBC funding

A steep boost in Crown broadcaster funding proposed by the Department of Canadian Heritage is unappealing to taxpayers, admitted a Liberal-appointed senator.

Sen. Andrew Cardozo, a long-time CBC supporter, in a recent report recommended the state broadcaster be considered an essential service — but without additional millions, according to Blacklock’s Reporter.

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The U.S. has covertly destabilized nations. With Canada, it’s being done in public says LPC propaganda outfit

Former senior Canadian intelligence officials say Canada needs to be on the lookout for campaigns aimed at destabilizing the country amid U.S. President Donald Trump’s escalating 51st state threats.

And they told CBC News that the most potent weapon wielded by the Trump administration to advance the cause of annexation would likely not be the intelligence agencies directed by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard.

“I would regard Mr. Musk as a problem,” said Ward Elcock, who headed CSIS for a decade including during the 9/11 attacks and also served as national security adviser. “I think that’s on a number of fronts.”

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Joly calls CBC essential to protecting Canadian democracy

Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly says the CBC is critical to safeguarding Canadian democracy against external threats, particularly from the United States.

Blacklock’s Reporter says speaking to the Vancouver Board of Trade, Joly argued that the Crown broadcaster is as vital as Parliament and the courts in the current “security crisis.”

How can a broadcaster almost no one watches be essential to anything?

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Liberals want to nearly double CBC funding, as an investment in ‘national security’

OTTAWA — The Liberals want Canadians to pay more for their public broadcaster, saying the country’s “national security” depends on it.

Canadian Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge presented her plan for “The Future of CBC/Radio-Canada” on Thursday, an apparent response to Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s plan to “defund the CBC.”

No one needs “More CBC” h/t Mauser

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‘CBC does not belong to the Liberals or the Conservatives’: Canadian Heritage Minister proposes CBC’s new mandate

There’s a need for new laws to ensure the future of CBC, said Canadian Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge on Thursday in an update on the new mandate for the public broadcaster.

She proposed removing the CBC’s budget out of the political realm, and instead through a per capita funding model based on the size of the population.

“CBC does not belong to the Liberals or the Conservatives. It does not belong to any political party. It belongs to Canadians,” said St-Onge.

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CBC programing used to be adventurous. Why has it bowed to lazy ideas and copycat shows?

In May of 2019, the CBC unveiled its annual slate of programming. One title stood out to me, at the time, as being especially curious: representing the confused manner in which the network was grappling with its role as the nation’s public broadcaster. I am talking, of course, about ”Family Feud Canada.”

Hosted by abiding CBC workhorse Gerry Dee, ”Family Feud Canada” followed the shopworn format of the popular gameshow, in which two rival families compete to find the most popular answers to a series of survey questions. It reminded me of “The Simpsons” bit where beloved Barbie-like doll Malibu Stacey, suffering a flagging market share, is repackaged with a new hat. “Family Feud Canada” was the same, tired, U.S. game show format bedecked with a Leafs jersey and toque.

CBC barely exists.

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