By Paul Vieira
OTTAWA--Canada's Liberal government on Wednesday ordered the country's broadcast regulator to review its recently released online-streaming decision that sparked the likelihood of fresh trade retaliation from the U.S.
Industry watchers and consumer groups said the directive likely puts the kibosh on efforts by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission to sharply increase the level of payments that U.S. streaming companies like Netflix would have to fork over to finance Canadian productions. The regulator, known as the CRTC, also proposed easing the financial burden on domestic, over-the-air broadcasters toward producing Canadian content. This prompted a sharp rebuke from Hollywood, which asked President Trump to explore options to compel Canada to reverse its decision.
Canada's Culture Minister Marc Miller said the regulator's order, issued on May 21, "would impose new costs on companies providing these services, which could ultimately fall on Canadian consumers through higher prices. At a time when Canadians face cost-of-living pressure, now is not the time to make culture and entertainment more expensive."
Under the proposal, online streaming companies like Netflix, Walt Disney, Apple, Amazon.com and Paramount Skydance would be required to allocate 15% of their Canadian revenue--up from 5%--to domestic programming, with an emphasis on French-language and indigenous content. Domestic, over-the-air broadcasting companies, such as those owned by BCE and Rogers Communications, would have their share of revenue drop to 25% from the present 30% to 45% range.
Miller "killed the centerpiece of the government's broadcasting policy," said Michael Geist, an internet-law expert and professor at the University of Ottawa. "Governments do not move to unwind CRTC decisions within two weeks unless they have concluded that it cannot stand."
Representatives for the broadcast regulator did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The CRTC's decision last month represented the latest attempt to implement legislation adopted under former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in 2023 to compel online streaming companies to showcase more Canadian content and contribute to the domestic entertainment sector.
Miller said the government would develop new policy directives for the broadcast regulator in regards to standing legislation, with an emphasis on keeping streaming services affordable for Canadians. In addition, Miller pledged 600 million Canadian dollars, or the equivalent of $434 million, of immediate support to the country's music and broadcasting sectors.
The Motion Picture Association was not immediately available for comment. The powerful Hollywood lobby group said what the Canadian regulator proposed would impose "discriminatory investment obligations" on its members, adding it violated Canada's trade obligations. The U.S. Ambassador to Canada, Pete Hoekstra, weighed in, arguing it represented fresh trade barriers that marked a deterioration in the investment climate for U.S. companies.
Miller's decision to halt the regulator's decision comes a day after senior Canadian officials traveled to Washington to try to revive trade talks with the Trump administration, and get negotiations on a more productive path. Discussions between Ottawa and Washington toward the review of the current U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade treaty had essentially stalled, with U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer describing discussions with Canada as challenging. The USTR had flagged the online streaming rules as a source of trade friction.
A spokeswoman for Miller's office did not immediately reply to a question about what role U.S.-Canada trade talks played in the CRTC rebuke.
The CRTC's spending obligations "were way out of line internationally and would have driven up costs for consumers," said Josh Tambish, senior Canada director for the U.S.-based Chamber of Progress, a left-leaning technology industry policy group. "Miller deserves full credit for supporting Canadian content without raising costs or reducing choice for Canadians."
Write to Paul Vieira at paul.vieira@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 03, 2026 11:26 ET (15:26 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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