What the commissioner really meant is that they couldn’t figure out how to regulate the internet, though they dearly wanted to. The sole purpose of the CRTC is to regulate communications, and it went against the commission’s instinct to have such a large and growing platform sharing information without the steady hand of a government agency to guide it.
The internet is not totally lawless, and many cases have set precedents limiting behaviour in both the criminal and civil courts. Laws against defamation apply to internet postings as well as laws against threats or fomenting violence. Posting of child pornography is illegal, and police agencies actively work to catch and charge offenders. Internet providers can be compelled to strip away the anonymity of service users with a court order, and they typically are cooperative. There are still many bad actors on the internet, but people can’t act with impunity there.
Assuming Minister Guilbeault’s new bill is like his last one, it will go much farther than trying to regulate illegal or defamatory actions on the internet. The prior bill sought to ban content deemed “likely to foment detestation or vilification of an individual or group.” Offenders could be fined as much as $70,000 and be sentenced to house arrest. Those are some serious penalties for offences as vague as “detestation or vilification.” Applied broadly, most of the people who get into heated debates on X or Meta could be charged. It will take several court cases to clarify exactly how those terms apply to internet speech and how punishable they may be.
The proposed online harms bill is a solution seeking a problem. There isn’t public demand for such contentious legislation, so why is Guilbeault determined to wade into it? Is he acting independently as a minister, or does the Carney government want to continue with the path of regulatory enforcement on the internet that his predecessor began?
The Carney government has a massive legislative agenda in front of it. The tariff wars between China and the United States continue to pressure the economy. Canadians still see immigration as being out of control. Violent crimes are still being committed by repeat offenders on bail, and the nation is facing a massive budget deficit. The honeymoon is wearing off, and Canadians are demanding results from Prime Minister Carney. The government should avoid having too many irons in the fire so it can deliver on what matters.
Dropping the online harms bill from the legislative agenda would be a wise course of action. It would allow the government to focus on key issues, and allow Carney to put a little more distance between himself and Trudeau’s government. The government will have to resist its compulsion to control speech, however, and that won’t be easy for it.







