LP_468x60
on-the-record-468x60-white
Canada

Carney’s budget includes $150M boost for CBC and plan to ‘explore participation’ in Eurovision

Alyona alyona & Jerry Heil of Ukraine perform the song Teresa & Maria during the Grand Final of the Eurovision Song Contest in Malmo, Sweden, on May 11, 2024.

The

federal budget

announced Tuesday

proposed a plan

that would boost funding for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and its French-language counterpart, Radio-Canada — and included in that plan was the possibility that Canada could participate in Eurovision.

According to the budget

, $150 million would go toward the broadcaster “to strengthen its mandate to serve the public and to better reflect the needs of Canadians” in 2025-26. The government was also working with CBC to “explore participation in Eurovision,” the televised songwriting competition.

However, little information is available about the Eurovision plan. “Further details will be announced in due course,” a spokesperson for the Department of Finance Canada told National Post after the budget announcement.

The investment will strengthen CBC’s strategy, which “is focused on increasing the benefits to Canadians of a healthier media ecosystem. It supports the production of Canadian stories, and deeper partnerships with communities to strengthen democracy and bring Canadians together,” the broadcaster said in a

statement

released on Tuesday. CBC did not mention Eurovision in its statement.

Canada has not officially taken part in the song contest, although Canadians have participated on behalf of other countries. Most notably, Canadian icon Celine Dion won the competition in 1988, singing Ne Partez Pas Sans Moi (Don’t Leave Without Me) in French. She was representing Switzerland.

Public broadcasters who are members of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) are tasked with

selecting participants

for the contest.

According to EBU’s site

, Canada is not a member. Although countries like Israel and Australia are not in Europe, they can participate because they are members of EBU.

Non-European countries that are not EBU members must be “specially invited” to take part,

Eurovision says

.

The first Eurovision Song Contest was

held in 1956

. But it didn’t air on Canadian television screens until 1990,

according to Eurovoix News

, a site dedicated to news about the contest.

The next Eurovision contest is set to be held in Vienna, Austria, in May 2026.

After the federal budget was announced, Conservative MP Andrew Lawton commented about it on X. “Can’t afford groceries? Don’t worry — the Liberal budget is exploring participation by CBC in Eurovision,” he wrote.

The budget also includes roughly $400 million intended to “grow Canada’s creative industries and help Canadian talent succeed in an increasingly digital and global marketplace.”

The funds will support the Canada Music Fund, TV5MONDEplus, Telefilm, the Canada Media Fund, the National Film Board, the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Canada Periodical Fund’s Special Measures for Journalism, according to the budget.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.