Tuesday, 6 March 2018

SWI swissinfo.ch/Urs Geiser: Attack on public broadcasting licence fee clearly fails

Front page - SWI swissinfo.ch

Vote March 4, 2018
Attack on public broadcasting licence fee clearly fails
By Urs Geiser

    Politics
    Culture
    Direct democracy

    in depth: Vote March 4, 2018

This content was published on March 4, 2018 6:04 PMMar 4, 2018 - 18:04
Wall of television screens in a studio control room

Voters decided not to pull the plug on the public broadcasters which provide programmes in all four national languages (German, French, Italian and Romansh) in Switzerland 
(swissinfo.ch)

Voters have rejected a proposal to do away with the mandatory licence fee for Switzerland’s public broadcasters.

Final results show 71.6% of voters throwing out the initiative, which was launched by the youth chapters of two major political parties on the right.

All regions and 26 cantons rejected the proposal. Urs Bieri, director of the leading GfS Bern research institute, said the "no" voters were even in the majority in rural, traditionally more conservative regions.

Only six of the country's more than 2,250 municipalities came out in favour of the initiative.
External Content

Live results of March 4, 2018 ballot: Licence fee for public broadcasting and federal taxes 2021
Switzerland




Vote from 04/03/2018
Participation: 54.1%
Imprint

Live results of March 04 2018 ballot: Licence fee for public broadcasters and Federal taxes 2021

“The result shows that voters want to maintain a public service broadcaster and that they are prepared to pay a licence fee,” Communications Minister Doris Leuthard said at a news conference on Sunday.

She said the result was a verdict against a system with exclusively commercial radio and television programmes in Switzerland.

Leuthard described the result as a fiasco for critics of a public licence fee and called for restraint in further discussions.
Communications Minister Leuthard addressing the media after the No Billag vote

Communications Minister Leuthard says the above average turnout shows that "democracy is alive" 
(Keystone)

Moves are already underway by several political parties in parliament, particularly on the right, to curb advertising revenue for the public Swiss Broadcasting Corporation (SBC), swissinfo.ch's parent company, and cut its licence fee further.
Losers and winners

In an initial reaction, the initiative committee conceded defeat only indirectly but said the debate helped "break a taboo on the mandatory fee".

Campaigner Olivier Kessler told public radio that at the very least the vote was a "victory for direct democracy".

The "No Billag" campaign (Billag is the service responsible for collecting the fee), largely supported by the rightwing Swiss People’s Party and libertarian groups, sought to limit the scope of state intervention.

They argued that the SBC is too dominant, stifling competition by private media companies. The initiative was also supported by the Federation of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises, which said the fee was unfair for companies.
Cohesion

On the winning side of Sunday's vote were the government, most of the country's political parties, as well as major institutions and organisations.

They said that scrapping the licence fee would spell the end of the SBC, a key institution due to its contribution to the cohesion of the multilingual country and its importance for a functioning democracy.

The SBC director general, Gilles Marchand, said it was a good result for the public broadcaster in all the different Swiss language regions.

He pledged to make the SBC more efficient, cutting CHF100 million ($107 million) from the budget from 2019.

He also promised to boost cooperation with the private media sector and to focus SBC programmes on information and culture, and to adapt to the challenges of the digital age.
Intense campaign

Sunday's vote follows several months of emotional campaigning by political groups and a broad range of civil society groups mainly supporting the SBC, including swissinfo.ch.

Public attention has been high and debates both in traditional and social media intense.

Campaigning lasted for more than four months - an unusually long period of time, with heightened media attention during and after the final parliamentary debate in October.
Receipt in a cafe
Vote March 4, 2018
Tax ‘total meltdown’ averted
By Thomas Stephens

Swiss voters have comfortably renewed the government’s right to tax its citizens and companies for another 15 years.
3 There are 3 comments on this article.

    in depth: Vote March 4, 2018

    Politics

See in another language: 1

Turnout was just over 54%, clearly above the average for a nationwide vote and higher than expected by pollsters.
Reforms

Under current regulations, every household and company must pay an annual fee of CHF451.10 ($482) and CHF597.50 respectively to use the SBC’s 17 radio and television channels in the national languages, German, French, Italian and Romansh, as well as their respective online services.

The fee accounts for 75% of the SBC's income, while the remainder is from advertising revenue.

In a bid to reform the current system, the government last year decided to lower the fee to CHF365 for private customers and a gradual system for companies, depending on their turnover. The aim is to cap the financial contribution to the SBC at CHF1.2 billion annually, while a bigger share of the funding will be divided among the more than 30 private broadcasters.

The SBC has been under pressure, notably from the political right and from private publishers, for several years. In 2015, an attempt led by the Federation of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises to thwart a change in the funding system narrowly failed at the ballot box.

A year later, voters rejected an initiative to boost the public service sector.

Sunday's vote is the fifth unsuccessful attempt since 1982 to challenge the public licence fee in a nationwide ballot. Most committees failed at an early stage and didn't collect enough signatures for an initiative. 
Results vote March 4

Abolition of public broadcast licence fee:

28.4% yes               71.6% no

Extension of federal tax regime:

84.1% yes               15.9% no

Turnout: 54.4%
end of infobox

swissinfo.ch

Links

    Federal Statistics Office (German, French, Italian)
    GfS Bern research and polling institute
    Committee No to licence fees for public broadcasters (German, French, Italian)
    Communications Ministry
    Swiss Broadcasting Corporation (SBC)

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There are 3 comments on this article.
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"Dr. Stan Showalter commented on the content at 05 March 2018 14:41".
Dr. Stan Showalter 05-Mar-2018 14:41
Congratulations to Switzerland on the overwhelming vote to keep public broadcasting free and democratic!
Write an answer...
 "Elizabeth replied to the comment of Dr. Stan Showalter at 05 March 2018 16:59."
Elizabeth 05-Mar-2018 16:59
Free? that's not what I read in the article...
Write an answer...
"HAT commented on the content at 05 March 2018 17:06".
HAT 05-Mar-2018 17:06
2 million voted yes to the Billag at around 460chf per year. That is about 950million chf for the Billag.
Wow...do they need so much money for a "free and democratic" press and media company?
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