The Online Streaming Act, or Bill C-11, passed the Senate and received royal assent Thursday evening, bringing to an end more than a year of charged political debate between the Liberal government and the legislation’s critics.
, racialized and francophone creators a bigger platform.
The final days of the bill’s passage through the Senate were marked by procedural tactics from Conservative senators to delay the final vote, prompting Sen. Marc Gold, the Liberals’ representative in the upper chamber, to introduce a time-allocation motion to rein in the lengthy debate.
At issue was a section of the bill critics argued grants the CRTC the ability to regulate user content, despite the government’s assurances that those videos would be excluded. Senators ultimately voted Thursday in favour of accepting the House of Commons’ ruling on the bill, but delivered a message to Ottawa as they did so: that the government would stick to its word and ensure the CRTC would not target user content.,” and that she “couldn’t vote for it.”
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