Justice Centre’s Statement on Bill C-11, The Online Streaming Act, receiving Royal Assent

Share this:

Justice Centre for Constituional Freedoms

Justice Centre’s Statement on Bill C-11, The Online Streaming Act, receiving Royal Assent

Share this:

The Justice Centre is disappointed that Bill C-11, introduced to Parliament by the Minister of Canadian Heritage, was approved by the Senate and granted Royal Assent on April 27, 2023. Despite significant concerns from Canadians, content creators, and democratic representatives, the majorities in the Commons and the Senate have chosen to prioritize government control and power over freedom of expression.

The Act will allow the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commissions (CRTC) to extensively regulate streaming platforms such as YouTube and Rumble, and even user generated content that directly or indirectly generates revenues (albeit non-commercial). The CRTC will also have discretion to determine what counts as distinctively Canadian content and to prioritize it, to force platforms to comply with policy objectives promoting, e.g., Indigenous, “racialized” or “ethnocultural” communities, as well as various “sexual orientations, gender identities and expressions”. It will fall under the CRTC’s jurisdiction to penalize any regulated entity found to be spreading misinformation (according to the CRTC’s definition of misinformation), and to impose significant fines (up to $250,000) for any breaches of the Act.

The Government of Canada should not be in the business of regulating political podcasts or determining what counts as Canadian content. It should not have the power to decide what content creators or news organizations can or should create or express or report. That’s for Canadians themselves to decide.

Canadian heritage and culture matter. Open debate and freedom of expression also matter. Bill C-11 puts these important human values into sharp opposition to the detriment of the ability of Canadians, as free agents, to hear, discover, inquire, and know about their country and the world beyond.

Share this:

New Report - Five years on: Tracing the costs of lockdowns

New Report – Five years on: Tracing the costs of lockdowns

CALGARY, AB: A new report from the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms examines the immediate and long-term negative impacts of...
Alberta lawyer Roger Song

Alberta lawyer challenges law society’s authority to be ‘woke’

CALGARY, AB: The Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms is providing lawyers to Roger Song in a constitutional challenge to...
Controversial vaccine mandates

BC healthcare workers face another hurdle in Covid vaccine mandate challenge

VANCOUVER, BC: The Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms announces that 11 BC healthcare workers continue to challenge Dr. Bonnie...

Explore Related News

New Report - Five years on: Tracing the costs of lockdowns
Read More
Alberta lawyer Roger Song
Read More
Controversial vaccine mandates
Read More
New Report - Five years on: Tracing the costs of lockdowns
Alberta lawyer Roger Song
Controversial vaccine mandates
George Katerberg's billboard