Investing.com -- Ottawa is engaging in preliminary discussions with Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:META) to restore news access on Facebook and Instagram, citing the need to resolve critical trade friction with the United States, according to reporting from CBC News. The parent company of the social networks blocked Canadian journalism in 2023 following the passage of the Online News Act, a move designed to avoid mandatory payments to domestic media outlets.
The regulatory standoff has recently escalated into a diplomatic "trade irritant" for the Trump administration, which views the legislation as discriminatory toward American digital giants. U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer recently warned that the upcoming review of the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) will "depend on the successful resolution" of such digital trade disputes.
Alisson Lévesque, a spokesperson for Canadian Identity Minister Marc Miller, confirmed in seperate reporting by The Globe and Mail that heritage officials are currently in active dialogue with the California-based tech firm. “We want news back. How do we go there is a question mark and that’s why we are having conversations,” Lévesque stated during a recent briefing.
The federal government maintains that the willingness to negotiate is a strategic necessity as the formal 2026 review of North America’s primary trade pact approaches this July. “The door has always been open on our government’s side to discuss these issues,” said Hermine Landry, press secretary to Minister Miller, in an interview with CBC.
While Google reached a $100 million annual settlement with Ottawa in late 2023, Meta has remained steadfast in its refusal to pay for news content it claims holds little commercial value.




















