logo
EXCLUSIVE: Leaked audio of CBC disciplinary meeting with former TV host Travis Dhanraj

EXCLUSIVE: Leaked audio of CBC disciplinary meeting with former TV host Travis Dhanraj

National Post21-07-2025
A leaked audio recording of an internal CBC disciplinary meeting for a national news anchor reveals the public broadcaster's tension over its policies on journalistic standards and freedom clashing with protecting its corporate image.
Article content
Travis Dhanraj, once the host of a CBC television news show called Canada Tonight with Travis Dhanraj, resigned earlier this month with fiery letters accusing the CBC of 'tokenism masquerading as diversity, problematic political coverage protocols, and the erosion of editorial independence.'
Article content
Article content
His letters, one to CBC leadership and another to CBC colleagues, were made public and created controversy, including over perceived political imbalance in news coverage at the publicly funded broadcaster. Last week, Conservative Members of Parliament called for a public hearing into Dhanraj's 'damning allegations' on workplace culture and biased reporting.
Article content
Article content
More than a year before his still reverberating resignation, however, a disciplinary meeting for Dhanraj was convened by CBC shortly after he made a social media post on April 19, 2024. His post on X said: 'At a time when the public broadcaster is under increasing scrutiny and when transparency is needed.' CBC's president Catherine Tait had been asked to appear on his show. 'We wanted to discuss new budget funding, what it means for jobs & the corporation's strategic priorities ahead. Our request was declined. This is unfortunate.'
Article content
At a time when the public broadcaster is under increasing scrutiny and when transparency is needed, #CanadaTonight requested an intvu w/ @PresidentCBCRC Catherine Tait. We wanted to discuss new budget funding, what it means for jobs & the corporation's strategic priorities ahead.…
— Travis Dhanraj (@Travisdhanraj) April 19, 2024
Article content
Article content
The disciplinary meeting preceded his removal from on-air duties for the CBC News Network show that bore his name.
Article content
Article content
Dhanraj declined to comment on the recording or the meeting, referring questions to his lawyer, Kathryn Marshall. Marshall confirmed the recording National Post has is an authentic portion of a longer disciplinary meeting between Dhanraj and CBC officials.
Article content
The CBC manager speaking in the recording is identified as Andree Lau, senior director of digital publishing and streaming. Lau's LinkedIn page describes her job as overseeing the strategic and editorial direction of CBC News Network as well as other CBC news properties.
Article content
In the recording she appears to equate a CBC journalist reporting something critical about the CBC with a potential breach of journalistic conflict of interest ethics, on the grounds that a CBC journalist has a personal stake in the broadcaster's success.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Victoria police investigate antisemitic graffiti at 'oldest synagogue in Western Canada'
Victoria police investigate antisemitic graffiti at 'oldest synagogue in Western Canada'

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Victoria police investigate antisemitic graffiti at 'oldest synagogue in Western Canada'

Police are investigating an incident involving antisemitic graffiti at a Victoria synagogue that a rabbi says has left the congregation in shock. The incident at Congregation Emanu-El Synagogue, a place of worship that has stood at the corner of Blanshard and Pandora in the city's downtown since 1863, has drawn condemnations from politicians, Jewish groups and the synagogue's rabbi. Photos on social media show a message handwritten in black, capital letters scrawled near an entrance to the synagogue. "It was really a message of real hate," Rabbi Harry Brechner said on Wednesday, recalling what was written. "That they would get their revenge; they were calling us evil and baby killers and all of that kind of stuff. It was pretty harsh." Victoria police say they were called to the synagogue on Saturday. Brechner said a congregant found the message next to a set of doors during a busy day, with worship services and a bar mitzvah. The police department said in a statement said its officers then "documented the graffiti, collected evidence, and then worked with [the] City of Victoria to have it removed." They are encouraging anyone with information about it to contact them. Politicians decry message The graffiti drew rebukes from politicians like Victoria Mayor Marianne Alto, Public Safety Minister Nina Kreiger and Premier David Eby. "I am saddened and disappointed to hear of the racist and antisemitic graffiti that was left on the Congregation Emanu-El building this weekend," Alto's statement read. "As the oldest synagogue in Western Canada, Congregation Emanu-El and the Jewish community have been, and remain, a key part of the Victoria community, and this disturbing vandalism is deeply harmful." According to the Jewish Federation of Greater Vancouver, 62 per cent of Jewish British Columbians have experienced at least one antisemitic incident since the Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, attack on southern Israel. Brechner said despite such incidents rising in Canada, Victoria has been "pretty quiet," making this incident "a little bit shocking." "Even things between the pro-Palestinian demonstrators and the synagogue, they've been really cordial. People have been pretty respectful. So this sort of changed that," he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store