Swiss voters yesterday rejected a referendum to slash public broadcaster SRG’s funding, with the interim results showing 62 per cent opposing a plan to cut the annual licence fee, a move critics warned would weaken media and fuel disinformation.
The campaign wanted to reduce the annual licence fee that all Swiss households must pay from 335 Swiss francs ($432) to 200 francs.
Supporters, mainly from right-wing groups including the Swiss People’s Party (SVP), had argued that the charge – the highest in the world – was too expensive, and that SRG, which runs 17 radio stations and seven TV channels in four languages, had become too bloated. They also said the SRG was not politically independent, and had a left-wing bias in its coverage.
Opponents had said the move reflected pressure on public media organisations from the political right, which has accused national broadcasters globally of being politically biased against them.
News, sports and cultural coverage would suffer, opponents said, while an SRG weakened by lower funding could mean that disinformation would be easier to spread.