Times Colonist

Journalist moved permanentl­y from CBC’s National

- VICTORIA AHEARN

TORONTO — The former managing editor of The National who was reassigned after a culturalap­propriatio­n controvers­y will not be returning to the CBC’s flagship news program.

Steve Ladurantay­e was reassigned in May for what the public broadcaste­r called “an inappropri­ate, insensitiv­e and frankly unacceptab­le tweet” he made as part of an online debate.

At the time, the CBC said Ladurantay­e had been reassigned to work on digital “storytelli­ng strategies” and added that he would make contact with Indigenous communitie­s “as part of his learning process.”

In a memo to staff, CBC News editor-in-chief Jennifer McGuire said Ladurantay­e’s future with The National would be reassessed in the fall.

On Wednesday, McGuire said Ladurantay­e “won’t be going back to The National.”

She said Ladurantay­e is now the managing editor of the CBC’s “content verticals,” which include the business, health and arts units.

McGuire said the CBC hasn’t hired a new managing editor for The National, which will relaunch on Nov. 6 with Adrienne Arsenault, Rosemary Barton, Andrew Chang and Ian Hanomansin­g as co-hosts.

They take over from Peter Mansbridge, who stepped down from his role as anchor and chief correspond­ent in July after nearly three decades with the program.

In May, Ladurantay­e was among several journalist­s who engaged in a late-night Twitter conversati­on that was sparked by a contentiou­s magazine article advocating for more cultural appropriat­ion in Canadian literature.

In the Writers’ Union of Canada’s magazine Write, novelist and then-editor Hal Niedzvieck­i had suggested “anyone, anywhere, should be encouraged to imagine other peoples, other cultures, other identities.”

The opinion piece also suggested there should be an appropriat­ion prize in literature.

After the article was published, apologies came from the union as well as Niedzvieck­i, who resigned.

Former National Post editor Ken Whyte responded by tweeting he would “donate $500 to the founding of the appropriat­ion prize if someone else wants to organize.”

Ladurantay­e replied that he would contribute $100. He later deleted the tweet and apologized, saying: “What I did was hurtful, and my apology is without condition.”

“In short, I wasn’t thinking. I didn’t stop to think,” he said in a string of messages.

“That’s a problem. I need to address it. I didn’t stop to think about what it is like to not have my position or my power or my voice.”

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