The Canadian government has announced it will effectively kill the CRTC’s recent Online Streaming ruling by issuing a new policy direction that forces the regulator to redo its decision — a rare and dramatic intervention that comes less than two weeks after the ruling was released. Michael Geist
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• Ottawa will order the CRTC to revisit and unwind its decision that tripled streamer contributions to Canadian content from 5% to 15% of Canadian revenues. CBC.ca
• Because the Broadcasting Act does not allow cabinet to overturn this type of CRTC ruling directly, the government must use a new policy direction and trigger a fresh CRTC proceeding to nullify the decision. Michael Geist
• To keep the cultural sector onside during the reset, Ottawa is promising a $600 million payout to replace the revenue the CRTC’s ruling would have generated. Michael Geist
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• Prime Minister Mark Carney says the CRTC’s decision would raise prices for Canadians, and “this is not the time to raise the cost for Canadians.” CBC.ca
• The ruling had become a major trade irritant with the United States, especially as CUSMA is up for review. The U.S. had signalled possible tariff retaliation if Canada pushed ahead. Michael Geist
• The government had already backed down on the Digital Services Tax under similar U.S. pressure, and this move is seen as another concession. Yahoo Finance
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• Streaming services with $25M+ in Canadian revenue would have to contribute 15% of that revenue to Canadian and Indigenous content.
• This would have made Canada one of the most expensive jurisdictions in the world for streamers. Michael Geist
• The U.S. Motion Picture Association and the U.S. ambassador warned the policy would drive away investment and raise consumer prices. iPhone in Ca...
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• Unifor calls the government’s reversal a “devastating blow” to Canadian cultural sovereignty and local news, arguing that U.S. tech giants should be required to reinvest in Canada. Yahoo Finance
• Critics say the government is caving to U.S. pressure and undermining years of work to regulate foreign streaming giants.