Amanda Lang Still Did Paid Speaking Gigs That New CBC Rules Prevent

dean connor

CBC News correspondent Amanda Lang has continued to do paid speaking engagements for companies that “lobby or otherwise influence public policy” after the broadcaster introduced a guideline that banned its journalists from doing so.

The prominent CBC personality is the subject of stories by two journalists who say she carried out paid speaking gigs for companies that lobby the federal government, and in a number of cases, that she has covered herself as a reporter.

But the public broadcaster insists the speeches were “grandfathered” — they were booked before the new policy came down in April.

Lang posted this tweet on Monday, the same day that Canadaland’s Sean Craig, one of the two journalists, posted a story about her.

Twenty years of credible journalism speaks for itself. But your public broadcaster can’t. It’s time to voice your support. The haters hate.

— Amanda Lang (@AmandaLang_CBC) December 23, 2014

CBC started a review of its on-air personalities’ speaking engagements after it emerged that Rex Murphy had made an oilsands-friendly speech in Lake Louise and Peter Mansbridge had been paid to speak by an oil and gas lobby.

The public broadcaster subsequently announced new policies around paid speeches.

Following that announcement, Lang carried out two paid engagements as a moderator for seminars organized by insurance company Manulife in July and August, Canadaland reported.

Just a short time later, Lang interviewed Donald Guloien, Manulife’s president and CEO, and gave him an “uncritical platform” to talk about its asset management business, without disclosing her paid engagements on the air, Craig said.

He went on to show that Guloien is registered as a lobbyist for Manulife Financial Corporation by the Office of the Commissioner of Lobbying of Canada.

CBC spokesperson Chuck Thompson told Canadaland that Lang’s Manulife engagements had been “grandfathered” because they were booked before the broadcaster came up with its new policy.

But Craig noted that Lang had another speaking engagement with insurance company Sun Life on Nov. 24, just over a month after she interviewed CEO Dean Connor on the air, in what he called “ridiculously positive” coverage.

Connor is also a registered lobbyist.

Thompson told The Huffington Post Canada that Lang had been contracted for the Sun Life speech — in which she talked about the subject of her book and nothing else, he said — before CBC came out with its policy.

“There are many occasions, several occasions where people get booked long in advance,” he said. “Amanda is someone who’s going to honour any contractual obligation that she has, and it’s no different with this particular instance.”

As for the Manulife engagement, Thompson said it was disclosed on CBC’s disclosure site, but not on the air on Sept. 5, when the Guloien interview was broadcast.

Meanwhile, ex-CBC journalist Frank Koller wrote a blog post earlier this month alleging that the broadcaster is “seriously backtracking on its paid-speeches policy.”

In a letter to Jennifer McGuire, editor-in-chief of CBC News, he pointed out Lang’s speaking engagement for Sun Life, and another as a moderator for the Portfolio Managers Association of Canada.

Koller also noted that “The National” host Peter Mansbridge had spoken at the Morningstar Canadian Investment Awards; that business correspondent Dianne Buckner had spoken at a Canadian Chamber of Commerce awards dinner; and that investigative journalist Diana Swain had spoken at an event for the Project Management Institute (PMI).

“Certainly, with any reasonable reading of this policy and considering the payers involved in the above examples and the others listed, one would have expected the CBC to have immediately refused permission for its journalists to attend — and be paid,” Koller wrote.

He posted McGuire’s response to him in a later blog: she said that CBC is “100 per cent living up to the commitments we made when we concluded our review last April.”

McGuire went on to say that none of the groups Koller mentioned (she initially omitted Sun Life) “makes a significant effort to lobby or otherwise influence public policy.”

(The Canadian Chamber of Commerce has two active lobbyists on the federal registry).

But she was more sympathetic to Koller’s point on the Sun Life engagement: “This is an example of a request we now reject,” McGuire wrote.

The answer didn’t satisfy Koller.

Thompson told HuffPost Canada that the content of Lang’s speeches does “not, in any way, present a conflict of interest nor does it compromise her journalistic integrity or that of CBC News.”

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