Google’s blocking of links to news articles for some Canadians in response to the Liberal government’s Bill C-18 will be discussed at a special House of Commons committee on Feb. 28, with MPs seeking to hear from the company’s leadership.
The committee members from the Liberal Party, the Bloc Québécois, and the NDP are seeking a meeting at the earliest opportunity to have Google executives testify to explain their “damaging and reckless behaviour.”
Google has decided to block access to online news for less than 4 percent of Canadian users in response to Bill C-18, the Online News Act.
The bill, which passed in the House and is currently in the Senate, seeks to compel online tech giants to strike ad revenue sharing deals with Canadian media outlets.
Companies like Google do not provide news content, but rather links to stories from media outlets.
Google went a step further in blocking content than its competitor Meta, which also threatened to pull news from its Facebook platform last fall over the same concerns.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau raised the Google issue unprompted at the end of a press conference on Feb. 24 to mark the one-year anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
“It really surprises me that Google has decided that they’d rather prevent Canadians from accessing news than actually paying journalists for the work they do,” Trudeau said.
“I think that’s a terrible mistake. And I know Canadians expect journalists to be well paid for the work they do.”