Close Menu
Times Network New Zealand
  • Home
  • Local News
  • World
  • Business
  • Lifetyle
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Food
  • Editor’s Choice
  • Press Release
What's On
Proscribing pro-Palestinian group as ‘terrorist’ was lawful, UK court says

Proscribing pro-Palestinian group as ‘terrorist’ was lawful, UK court says

June 16, 2026
Do the World Cup’s pricey tickets reflect US market rates and stop scalpers, as FIFA says?

Do the World Cup’s pricey tickets reflect US market rates and stop scalpers, as FIFA says?

June 16, 2026
Spanish police conclude initials ‘P.S.’ in diary of former party member refer to PM Pedro Sánchez

Spanish police conclude initials ‘P.S.’ in diary of former party member refer to PM Pedro Sánchez

June 16, 2026
Czech government scraps licence fees for public media in move critics call threat to press freedom

Czech government scraps licence fees for public media in move critics call threat to press freedom

June 16, 2026
EU fails to reach agreement on sanctioning Israel’s Ben Gvir despite member state pressure

EU fails to reach agreement on sanctioning Israel’s Ben Gvir despite member state pressure

June 16, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Times Network New Zealand
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Local News
  • World
  • Business
  • Lifetyle
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Food
  • Editor’s Choice
  • Press Release
Times Network New Zealand
Home » Czech government scraps licence fees for public media in move critics call threat to press freedom
World

Czech government scraps licence fees for public media in move critics call threat to press freedom

By Press RoomJune 16, 20263 Mins Read
Czech government scraps licence fees for public media in move critics call threat to press freedom
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Published on
15/06/2026 – 16:58 GMT+2

The Czech cabinet has signed off on legislation that would end licence fee funding for the country’s public broadcasters, replacing it with direct state budget financing — a shift that journalists, media freedom groups and tens of thousands of citizens say puts editorial independence at risk.

ADVERTISEMENT


ADVERTISEMENT

The bill, approved on Monday, affects Czech TV and Czech Radio, which would instead receive fixed annual sums broadly in line with the licence fee revenues they collected between 2008 and 2024 — before a previous centre-right administration increased them last year.

Culture Minister Oto Klempir, from the Motorists party, framed the overhaul as a modernisation in line with broader European practice. “We are thus joining most EU countries which have already dropped this outdated financing method,” he said at a press conference alongside Prime Minister Andrej Babiš.

Babiš, the billionaire leader of the populist ANO party whose coalition also includes the far-right SPD, defended the change by pointing to what he described as a lack of oversight at the two broadcasters. “The two media outlets are not making any cost savings and nobody controls them. And the main thing is we had this in our policy statement,” he said.

Staff at both Czech TV and Czech Radio have announced a 24-hour strike in protest. Workers fear the new model — which would make the broadcasters financially dependent on annual state allocations — leaves them exposed to political pressure from the ruling coalition.

The bill has been building public anger since it was first announced. It was among the central grievances at a mass anti-government demonstration in Prague in March, which drew more than 200,000 people onto the streets.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has been particularly outspoken in its condemnation, describing the legislation as “absurd” and the accompanying funding reduction as “drastic”. The press freedom watchdog warned that the reform “creates a political precedent for further disproportionate interference in the functioning of Czech public media.”

RSF was blunt about the broader implications. “At the end of this surreal journey we have a weakened independence of public broadcasting, and that’s a dead-end street for democracy,” it said, also calling on the European Commission to “do all that is in its powers” to help preserve the existing financing model.

The legislation still faces a significant parliamentary journey before it can take effect. Having cleared the cabinet, it must pass through both chambers of the Czech parliament and be signed by the president before its planned implementation date of 1 January 2027.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Proscribing pro-Palestinian group as ‘terrorist’ was lawful, UK court says

Proscribing pro-Palestinian group as ‘terrorist’ was lawful, UK court says

Do the World Cup’s pricey tickets reflect US market rates and stop scalpers, as FIFA says?

Do the World Cup’s pricey tickets reflect US market rates and stop scalpers, as FIFA says?

Spanish police conclude initials ‘P.S.’ in diary of former party member refer to PM Pedro Sánchez

Spanish police conclude initials ‘P.S.’ in diary of former party member refer to PM Pedro Sánchez

EU fails to reach agreement on sanctioning Israel’s Ben Gvir despite member state pressure

EU fails to reach agreement on sanctioning Israel’s Ben Gvir despite member state pressure

Albania assures EU its Kushner-linked tourism project will meet environmental standards

Albania assures EU its Kushner-linked tourism project will meet environmental standards

Moscow strike on Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra ‘one of Russia’s most serious crimes against Christian culture’

Moscow strike on Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra ‘one of Russia’s most serious crimes against Christian culture’

Ukraine and Moldova press ahead with bid to join the EU on enlargement ‘Mega Monday’

Ukraine and Moldova press ahead with bid to join the EU on enlargement ‘Mega Monday’

Lavender Provence farmers forced to raise laying hens to keep their activity going

Lavender Provence farmers forced to raise laying hens to keep their activity going

Trial opens for Swedish army consultant accused of attempted espionage for Russia

Trial opens for Swedish army consultant accused of attempted espionage for Russia

Editors Picks
Do the World Cup’s pricey tickets reflect US market rates and stop scalpers, as FIFA says?

Do the World Cup’s pricey tickets reflect US market rates and stop scalpers, as FIFA says?

June 16, 2026
Spanish police conclude initials ‘P.S.’ in diary of former party member refer to PM Pedro Sánchez

Spanish police conclude initials ‘P.S.’ in diary of former party member refer to PM Pedro Sánchez

June 16, 2026
Czech government scraps licence fees for public media in move critics call threat to press freedom

Czech government scraps licence fees for public media in move critics call threat to press freedom

June 16, 2026
EU fails to reach agreement on sanctioning Israel’s Ben Gvir despite member state pressure

EU fails to reach agreement on sanctioning Israel’s Ben Gvir despite member state pressure

June 16, 2026
Latest News
Proscribing pro-Palestinian group as ‘terrorist’ was lawful, UK court says

Proscribing pro-Palestinian group as ‘terrorist’ was lawful, UK court says

June 16, 2026
Do the World Cup’s pricey tickets reflect US market rates and stop scalpers, as FIFA says?

Do the World Cup’s pricey tickets reflect US market rates and stop scalpers, as FIFA says?

June 16, 2026
Spanish police conclude initials ‘P.S.’ in diary of former party member refer to PM Pedro Sánchez

Spanish police conclude initials ‘P.S.’ in diary of former party member refer to PM Pedro Sánchez

June 16, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Times Network New Zealand. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.