Edmonton Journal

PM rejects call for tax on broadband Internet

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is shooting down a parliament­ary committee’s recommenda­tion that Ottawa impose a five per cent tax on broadband Internet services as a way to “level the playing field” in Canada’s rapidly evolving news industry.

Liberal members of the Commons heritage committee released a long-awaited report Thursday with 20 recommenda­tions aimed at helping the slumping media industry adapt to rapid technologi­cal change and shifting consumer habits.

The majority report calls on Ottawa to apply the tax, levied on broadband Internet providers, to high-speed Internet services that allow for the streaming of music, movies and TV shows.

Liberal members of the committee tried to sell the move as one that would create more fairness because the tax is already applied to satellite and cable TV services.

But shortly after the report’s release, Trudeau categorica­lly rejected the idea.

“We respect the independen­ce of committees and Parliament and the work and the studies they do, but allow me to be clear: We’re not raising taxes on the middle class — we’re lowering them,” Trudeau said in Montreal. “We’re not going to be raising taxes on the middle class through an Internet broadband tax. That is not an idea we are taking on.”

The committee spent 15 months studying the ailing Canadian media industry, which has been steadily losing advertisin­g revenue and market shares to online giants such as Facebook, Netflix and Google.

“The amount of money that goes to Google and Facebook in news media is astounding and it is taking away from a limited pot (of advertisin­g revenue),” Liberal MP and committee member Seamus O’Regan said in defence of the taxation idea.

“We are asking that any obligation­s on broadcast media apply to digital. That is levelling the playing field.”

Among its other recommenda­tions, the report called for the publicly funded CBC to eliminate advertisin­g on its digital platforms; media companies be permitted to deduct taxes on digital advertisin­g on Canadian-owned platforms; and a five-year tax credit to compensate print outlets for a portion of their digital investment­s.

The report also signalled the need to protect the fading presence of local news in Canada. One solution suggested the CBC make local news and programmin­g a priority.

“This is an emergency,” O’Regan said of the fact fewer journalist­s than ever are keeping watch on important municipal issues. “This is a crisis in our democracy.”

The Conservati­ve members of the committee have introduced a report of their own, arguing that their Liberal counterpar­ts are living in the past.

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