The Liberal government has shut down debate on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s controversial online censorship bill, in an effort to expedite the Online Streaming Act into law.
Several Conservative MPs, along with official opposition leader Pierre Poilievre, took to social media on Thursday to express outrage over the Liberals’ decision to end debate over Bill C-11, and instead send it for its final vote. “The Liberals have just announced that they’re shutting down debate,” Poilievre exclaimed. “They’re censoring debate on their censorship bill.”
If passed, Bill C-11 would regulate digital streaming platforms by prompting them to financially contribute towards the creation and promotion of Canadian content.
URGENT BREAKING:
— Pierre Poilievre (@PierrePoilievre) March 30, 2023
Trudeau's team moments ago moved to shut down debate and ram through his online censorship bill.
We are still fighting.
But I need your help NOW.
Sign here for free speech: https://t.co/BewRL0AILI pic.twitter.com/jn3V9ykdwX
Proponents of the bill argue it will essentially extend the 1968 Broadcasting Act— which regulates how much Canadian programming is played by TV and radio broadcasters— to also cover major streaming platforms such as Netflix, Disney+ and Spotify, putting them under the control of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC).
According to McMaster University’s Public Policy in Digital Society program director Vass Bednar, Bill C-11 will deliver more Canadian culture and values to viewers via digital platforms. “And instead of building a whole new vehicle to do that, we’re trying to use the one that we have already, which is the CRTC,” she said.
Opponents to the online censorship bill argue it would give the CRTC— and the federal government at an arms-length— sweeping new powers to control the internet by defining what constitutes as Canadian content, ultimately controlling the programming available to Canadians. “For Canadians, that opens the door to state-controlled media,” said policy consultant Len St-Aubin. “Broadcasting regulation has always walked a fine line when it comes to freedom of expression. C-11 crosses the line.”
The Liberals, for their part, claimed the debate closure was warranted because the House and the Senate already spent countless hours pouring over the bill. “Within this House we spent 34 hours debating that bill, plus an additional 22 hours in committees,” said Liberal MP Jean-Yves Duclos. “This is history because this is the longest ever time that the Senate took— clause by clause— looking at the bill.”
The Liberals are shutting down debate on Bill C11! This is a bill that gives the govn’t authority to control what we can see, hear and post online. Talk about censorship!
— Rachael Thomas (@RachaelThomasMP) March 30, 2023
And now the govn’t is shutting down debate.
Censorship upon censorship! #killbillc11 pic.twitter.com/RyP99BxpGl
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5 Responses
In other news: sales of VPN’s skyrocket
Of course another liberal dictatorship, and here i thought my country Canada was a free country! Trudeau you are no better than Putin!!! First our guns for hunting and now take freedom of expression!!! Whats next? How many squares of butt wipe can i use in the bathroom?? Please sir can i have more???
typical lib cucks
No to censorship!
One more thing to overturn. WTF Trudeau!
He needs to resign.