Some members of the parliamentary commission of inquiry on public audiovisual oppose publishing the 300-page report by deputy Charles Alloncle, due to shocking proposals like merging channels and banning reality TV shows. They criticize its poor quality, tone, and erroneous claims. The vote is scheduled for Monday afternoon.
Deputies on the parliamentary commission of inquiry into public audiovisual threaten to block the publication of the report written by Charles Alloncle, a ciottiste deputy. This 300-page document proposes radical measures, such as merging channels and banning reality TV shows.
One commission member exclaims: “Frankly, given the poor quality of the report, its tone, its erroneous accusations, and its dubious sources, it feels like Charles Alloncle is doing everything to get it censored.” Another states: “I would like to publish this report, but not as it is. The approach is often insidious. There are false assertions about the course of our work and the assessment of facts concerning public audiovisual.”
A third adds: “Can a parliamentary report contain slanderous attacks? Objectively, there are grounds for censorship.”
The 30 deputies must review the report by Monday noon. That afternoon, they will vote on its publication. A majority in favor of censorship would prevent its release.