Bryan Brulotte: The CBC needs reform, not reverence |
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Bryan Brulotte: The CBC needs reform, not reverence
A publicly funded broadcaster should not operate as a dominant player in commercial media markets while claiming to serve the entire country
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The debate over the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation has become predictable. One side defends it as a pillar of national identity. The other calls for its outright defunding. Both positions miss the point. The CBC does not need to be preserved in its current form. Nor should it be dismantled entirely. What it requires is structural change rooted in first principles — clarity of purpose, fiscal discipline, and service to Canadians that the private market cannot or will not provide.
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The central problem is not simply cost. It is mandate drift and institutional culture. Over time, the CBC has expanded far beyond its original purpose as a public broadcaster serving national cohesion, regional access and cultural expression. Today, it operates across a wide range of commercial media spaces, competing directly with private firms in news, entertainment and digital content. It does so with the advantage of public funding. That model is neither sustainable nor defensible.
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More importantly, it is no longer reformable in any meaningful sense. Recent testimony before the House of Commons Heritage Committee reinforces what many Canadians have already concluded. The issue is not a single editorial decision or a temporary lapse in judgment. It is a deeply embedded institutional culture that shapes how stories are framed, which voices are amplified and which perspectives are excluded. Institutions develop internal norms over time. Those norms become self-reinforcing. Hiring decisions, editorial processes and promotion pathways all begin to reflect and protect the same worldview. Once that process is mature, it is extraordinarily difficult to reverse through leadership changes or internal directives. The CBC has reached that point.
Successive governments have promised cuts, defunding and reform. New executives have arrived with mandates committed to upholding “integrity, objectivity and impartiality” or building trust. None appear to be succeeding. The structural incentives remain unchanged, and the cultural dynamics persist. This is why the current model must be reconsidered. A publicly funded broadcaster should not operate as a dominant player in commercial media markets while also claiming to serve the entire country. Nor should Canadians be compelled to fund an institution that many no longer trust to reflect a broad range of views.
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At the same time, there remains a clear and legitimate role for public broadcasting in Canada. Canadians in rural and remote communities rely on services that private broadcasters often cannot sustain. French-language programming outside Quebec, Indigenous-language services and emergency broadcasting are not profit centres. They are public goods. This is where the CBC should focus. The path forward is not elimination. It is separation.
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The CBC should be partially privatized, with its commercial operations carved out and exposed to market discipline. Entertainment programming, advertising supported digital platforms and non-essential broadcast assets should be transitioned to private ownership or operated on a fully commercial basis without public subsidy. What remains should be a smaller, more focused public broadcaster. One that is funded transparently and held accountable for delivering specific outcomes: regional coverage, minority language services, national public affairs and emergency communications. This approach achieves three objectives.
First, it restores fairness to the media market. Private firms should compete with one another, not with a taxpayer-funded entity operating without the same constraints.
Second, it imposes discipline on the institution. A narrower mandate forces clarity and ensures that public dollars are directed toward genuine public service, not commercial expansion.
Third, it addresses the growing loss of trust. A focused public broadcaster, operating within a clearly defined mandate, is easier to govern, easier to measure, and more likely to earn broad legitimacy.
There will be objections. Some will argue that any reduction weakens Canadian culture. Others will claim that privatization risks losing national assets. These concerns are not without merit, but they are overstated. Canada’s cultural strength does not depend on the CBC being everywhere. It depends on it being effective where it matters most. The choice is no longer between reform and preservation. That moment has passed.
The real choice is between continuing to fund a model that is structurally misaligned with its purpose, or redesigning it to serve Canadians in a focused and credible way. The CBC was created to serve the country, not to compete with it or speak for only part of it. It is time to narrow its mandate, restore its purpose and subject the rest to the discipline of the market.
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