CPC wants answers over alleged CBC-LPOC collusion
Official Conservative Party press release just received:
Conservatives Demand Answers from the CBC over Alleged Collusion with the Liberal Party
OTTAWA - Today, former Liberal Cabinet Minister and current TVA journalist Jean Lapierre made shocking allegations about strategic collusion between journalists at the CBC and Liberal Members of Parliament at the House of Commons Ethics Committee.
According to Lapierre Liberal Members of Parliament asked former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney questions written by journalists at the CBC regarding any involvement in the spectrum auction for cellular and wireless devices.
"I knew all about those questions. They were written by the CBC and provided to the Liberal Members of Parliament and the questions that Pablo Rodriguez asked were written by the CBC and I can't believe that but last night, influential Member of Parliament came to me and told me those are the questions that the CBC wants us to ask tomorrow." (CTV Newsnet, December 13, 2007)
If proven true these allegations would mark the third major case of orchestrated anti-Conservative bias from a broadcaster that is financed by all Canadians for the benefit of all Canadians.
In 2004 an email from Stephanie Matteis of CBC's The National exposed the CBC's search for Canadians that would not vote for the Conservatives because they were "scared, freaked out or worried about the Conservatives, the Conservative agenda or its leader." (http://www.smalldeadanimals.com/archives/003009.html )
The CBC was also forced on August 21, 2006 to express "regret" over a story by CBC reporter Christina Lawand that misrepresented an answer given by Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper. (http://www.stephentaylor.ca/archives/000645.html )
"This is a very serious allegation that the CBC must provide an answer
RangerRay said:There will be no response. The MSM will not report it, therefore it will never have happened. Only us junkies who get our news from the blogosphere will know.
:-X
GAP said:Mike Duffy is covering it with Rodriguez, Co-martin, and ??. Not being subtle at all.
...
Bias....nah....(giggle)
Ebenezer 'the Grinch' Scrooge said:Time to cut off their funding and let them try stay in business as a private corporation. The CPC should be shouting this from the rooftops, and turn this whole Mulroney thing around on the libs. It would seem that Dion and his minions can't seem to do anything above board. The whole party is corrupt and has been for years. Honesty and fair play just isn't in their rule book.
GAP said:Then on "As it Happens" the questions were trying to demonize Mulroney every which way.
CBC reviewing claim reporter fed questions to Liberal MP
Published: Friday, December 14, 2007 | 7:16 PM ET
Canadian Press: THE CANADIAN PRESS
OTTAWA - The CBC has begun an internal investigation and possible disciplinary action after one of its parliamentary reporters apparently suggested questions to a Liberal MP taking part in the high-profile Mulroney-Schreiber inquiry.
The probe follows a formal complaint by the Conservative party.
The complaint centres on claims that Liberal Pablo Rodriguez directed questions from the CBC to Brian Mulroney during a highly anticipated Commons committee hearing on Thursday.
In a letter to the CBC ombudsman on Friday, the director of the Conservative party cited Liberal questions to Mulroney about whether he had lobbied the current government concerning the spectrum auction for cellular and wireless devices.
Rodriguez's line of inquiry prompted loud complaints from Tories on the committee, who accused the Liberals of going on a "fishing expedition" unrelated to the committee's mandate.
In the aftermath, former Liberal cabinet minister Jean Lapierre told CTV that he'd been told the Rodriguez questions came from the CBC.
A Liberal party official denied there was anything untoward, saying the party gets "bombarded" daily with comments and ideas for questions from Canadians and from reporters.
"We get people suggesting questions all the time, that's just life," said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The party also pointed out that Rodriguez had previously asked similar questions in the Commons about Mulroney and the wireless spectrum issue.
But the CBC acknowledged the practice was "inappropriate."
"In our view, while the reporter may have been in pursuit of a journalistically legitimate story, this was an inappropriate way of going about it and as such inconsistent with our journalistic policies and practices," said the e-mail statement from Jeff Keay, head of CBC's English media relations.
The public broadcaster did not name the reporter, but said "the particulars of this matter are currently under investigation and will be considered under the disciplinary processes outlined in our collective agreement."
The story raged across the conservative blogosphere all day Friday, where the incident was viewed as an example of Liberal bias by the CBC.
Conservative party spokesman Ryan Sparrow called the matter "a very serious allegation, and if proven true (it) begs the question: why is a public broadcaster getting involved in partisan politics?"
But Keay said the CBC does "not accept that this is evidence of bias against any particular political party, but rather was something that occurred in the context of trying to determine the specific circumstances of an ongoing political story."
Rodriguez did not return phone messages Friday.
CBC VP says reporter colluding with Liberal Party will be disciplined
Tuesday, December 18, 2007 at 03:08 PM Comments: 17
Aaron Wudrick has received an email from a VP at the CBC in which it appears that a decision has been reached concerning allegations that a CBC reporter was acting in collusion with the Liberal Party to frame questions to ask of Brian Mulroney at the Commons ethics committee hearings into the Karlheinz Schreiber affair.
Brian Mulroney During Brian Mulroney's appearance in front of the Commons ethics committee hearing looking into allegations made by Karlheinz Schreiber, Liberal MP Pablo Rodriguez created quite a ruckus when he posed this question:
(A video clip is in the original post at this point)
Jean Lapierre Conservative MPs were upset that Rodriguez seemed to go so far off the Schreiber story, but the real fireworks started later when former Liberal MP Jean Lapierre, now an analyst with CTV News, alleged that the question was actually written by a CBC reporter, and that Pablo Rodriguez was merely a proxy.
The question of CBC collusion with the Liberal Party has been debated a lot in the blogosphere, and the Conservative Party demanded answers from the CBC.
Aaron seems to have part of that answer in hand. From Aaron's blog:
Amazing what a little Bourque-driven traffic will do to stimulate interesting emails. This just showed up in my mailbox, forwarded from, if you can believe it, a vice-president of the CBC:
I wanted to let you know that CBC news chiefs have looked at the allegations made yesterday.
They feel that the reporter's actions in pursuing the story were inappropriate and against CBC/Radio-Canada's Journalistic Standards.
They are continuing to investigate the particulars and will follow the disciplinary processes outlined in the CBC's collective agreement.
I imagine that the CBC Ombudsman will be responding to complaints and investigating what happened as well.
They want to make sure this doesn't happen in future.
Read the whole thing, but clearly there are some remarkable elements to this break in the story:
* Despite Liberal protestations that this amounted to nothing and that everyone does it, the CBC news chiefs have decided that it indeed was inappropriate.
* The seriousness of the situation requires disciplinary action.
* The CBC news chiefs are not waiting for the Ombudsman to report on his investigation.
* The CBC news chiefs want to make sure this won't happen again, which suggests the person being disciplined will be held out as an example of the consequences of getting too close to any political party.
The CBC is moving quickly to respond to this situation. If the CBC felt that the Liberals would be forming the next government anytime soon, I doubt they would be acting so briskly.
Pablo Rodriguez. This leaves Liberal MP Pablo Rodriguez in a delicate position. He has stated that the notion that the CBC framed his questions was absurd. If it was so absurd, why does it look like a CBC reporter is about to be disciplined over the allegation? Expect a fair amount of not-so-good-natured ribbing aimed at Rodriguez for the next while every time he tries to ask a question.
Did Pablo Rodriguez and other Liberals offer to support the CBC in fighting off the allegation? If so, did the CBC decide it was better to discipline the reporter rather than accept any favours from the Liberal Party?
Karlheinz Schreiber. If there is discipline levelled against a CBC reporter, and the idea that the Karlheinz Schreiber affair was manufactured by the CBC starts to take hold with Canadians, will the whole business just evapourate?
How might this affect relationships between the Liberal Party and any media outlet in the future?
How much blowback can the Liberal Party expect to suffer if it is confirmed that it has secret media allies in the fight to unseat the Conservatives? Will Canadians appreciate shadowy cabals operating in our democracy? Will the Liberal Party be forced to defend itself against allegations that it manufactures the news Canadians are seeing?