Last month, Canadian Heritage Minister James Moore dodged questions from the Georgia Straight regarding how he might help the troubled media giant Canwest Global Communications Corp.
Moore dismissed any suggestion that the government might make regulatory changes to allow a foreign takeover as a “good Georgia Straight conspiracy theory”.
However, Moore was quoted yesterday (March 18) in a Canadian Press story saying that the government is looking at how to assist Canwest.
Canadian Press also reported that Canwest has contracted former Conservative campaign strategist Ken Boessenkool to “help plead its case”.
Canwest CEO Leonard Asper is the only person listed in the lobbyists registry doing any lobbying on behalf of Canwest.
Boessenkool is a registered lobbyist for Taser International, Enbridge, and the Vancouver Foundation, among other clients, but he is not listed on the electronic registry as an advocate for Canwest.
It's a bit of a mystery to me how Boessenkool could be lobbying for Canwest as a consultant without being listed in the registry, unless there is some time layover between when he begins working and when the registry posts this information on-line.
Nobody should be surprised that the Harper government will pull whatever levers it can to ensure the Asper family retains control over Canwest.
It's an important ally of Prime Minister Stephen Harper because it owns Global TV, the Vancouver Sun, the Province, the National Post, the Vancouver Courier, the North Shore News, the Delta Optimist, the Now papers, the Richmond News, and the Royal City Record as well as daily papers in several other Canadian markets.
The Aspers and Harper have enjoyed a symbiotic relationship. Harper ensured that the family patriarch Izzy Asper’s dream of a human-rights museum would come to fruition in Winnipeg, courtesy of massive sums of public funding.
And the Aspers helped ensure that Harper would remain prime minister when Canwest newspapers provided supportive editorials before the 2008 election and then hammered the idea of a Liberal-NDP coalition government supported by the Bloc Quebecois.
Don’t be surprised if Harper returns the favour by providing generous tax breaks to the private broadcasters, including Canwest.
It might not be enough to ensure the Aspers remain in control. After all, the corporation is struggling with a $3.7-billion debt.
But not to worry. If things are on the verge of falling apart, Harper can make regulatory changes to allow a foreign media giant to come to the rescue by purchasing a big share of Canwest.
Here’s my conspiracy theory for James Moore to chew on: the prime minister is trying to figure out how to save the Aspers’ asses without angering the boys in charge of CTVglobemedia, Quebecor, and Rogers Communications.
The only way to do that is to open the floodgates to all the broadcasters with massive tax breaks and regulatory changes, while at the same time refusing to offer one iota of help to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
It might buy Canwest some time. But it’s not going to guarantee the Conservatives will get reelected.
In the Internet age, people are no longer so reliant on broadcasters. Word will filter out that Harper has put the media giants at the front of the soup line.
As the bailouts and sweetheart deals in the United States have revealed, this sharply elevates the risk that average citizens will exact their revenge at the ballot box.
I'm guessing that by this time next year, our prime minister's surname is probably going to be Ignatieff and not Harper--in part because Harper will have misread how the public would react to a bunch of legislative changes designed to benefit private broadcasters.




Comment (11)
Comments
If you look to who stands up and is willing to take the hard knocks for righteousness and still remain standing other than them please let me hear your voice.
People with minds that are so jumbled up with such disgraceful ideas, must have had them in there minds, all the time and if this is so, I would prefer being around these honorable men, even if I do not agree with them at times.
Last month, Canadian Heritage Minister James Moore dodged questions from the Georgia Straight regarding how he might help the troubled media giant CanWest Global Communications Corp.
Moore dismissed any suggestion that the government might make regulatory changes to allow a foreign takeover as a “good Georgia Straight conspiracy theory”.
Can not Canadians come together without being blamed for being there when a friend is needed.
This dealing with CanWest I would rather have Canada remain Canada as long as possible before it is bought and sold to the highest bidder.
The thinking with some of these articles are so far removed from any welfare of any one except for writing articles is a disgrace in itself....
First, Charlie, if you'd done your homework you'd know that the Lobbyist Registry indeed has a lag between notification and posting. It's described on their site.
Second, the reason Leonard Asper is the only registered lobbyist is because the registry only permits a company to list its most senior officer as the registrant. It took me less than 5 minutes to find a multitude of other legal and regulatory types listed as lobbyists for the company on the registry, under Asper's main registration.
Third, you raise the evil spectre of "tax breaks" - what good are tax breaks to a company that's so broke it's on the verge of bankruptcy and won't pay any taxes anyhow?
This piece is junk.
The problem I have with apologists for right wing media is that they have limitless greed and won't be happy until all major media in Canada is singing the neocon tune. The CRTC is a joke and won't fulfil it's mandate so the CBC has only been attempting to provide some balance in the media but all the other posters on this thread won't be happy until the airwaves, tabloids and broadsheets are all in stync with CONservative ideals. It must really pain you that both Harper's and Canwest's days are numbered. SMBsYRMFs
Broadcast channels used to be community based feeds that would show us what happened in our neighborhood, our province, our country and our world.
Now, specialization of channels is the most successful model in broadcasting. Unfortunately, with specialty tv matching viewers to advertisers more efficiently, maybe its time for the ”˜over the air’ stations to admit they are done. They are already dismantling their programming and are ”˜hat in hand’ for the government to bail them out.
Local news and programming has succumbed to the fiscal axe - trying to maintain the 3 Canadian networks that make the majority of their money from American Programming. They are taking the money (and jobs) from local news, public affairs and entertainment programming and putting it towards purchasing American programming at rates highest in the history of Canadian broadcasting.
If there is to be a radical shift in broadcast delivery that will affect all Canadian tv watchers, please make it a well thought out option, not a response to media conglomerates trying to squeeze the last drops out of an outdated broadcast model.
If ”˜pay for carriage’ is the immediate solution, give the consumers choice. If we are going to have to pay for ”˜basic cable stations’, give us a choice. Eliminate the basic cable tier and let consumers pick and choose what channels we want to be our new ”˜basic local specialty’ channels. That way we can control the financial impact and ”˜vote with our wallets’.
Doug Slack
By "the vast majority of Canadians" I assume you mean the vast majority of ex-Reform party supporters who know next to nothing about the real state of broadcasting in Canada or anywhere else for that matter. The "sub-standard programming" you accuse the CBC of producing is head-and-shoulders above that of the private broadcasters. And it's done with an annual subsidy that is well below that received by public broadcasters in most other countries--a fact even the National Post concedes (so it must be true!). What's really sub-standard in this debate is the knowledge and good faith of those who evidently object to the very principle of public broadcasting.