Czech government pushes plan to scrap TV licence fees, sparking media independence fears
The Czech government led by Prime Minister Andrej Babiš has pushed forward a controversial plan to abolish mandatory television licence fees and shift funding for public broadcasters entirely to the state budget from 2027, sparking widespread protests and warnings of political interference. The proposal, approved by the cabinet on Monday, would strip Česká televize (Czech Television) of one billion korunas and Český rozhlas (Czech Radio) of 400 million korunas in annual revenue, according to figures cited by broadcaster executives and analysts.
Hynek Chudárek, director-general of Czech Television, told Radiožurnál that the cuts would force the broadcaster to cancel new projects and could lead to hundreds of job losses. “We are falling deeper and deeper. Independence is genuinely at risk when funding is insufficient,” he said. Media expert Marína Urbániková warned that the shift could put the Czech Republic in conflict with the European Union, noting that the licence-fee system provides citizens with a clear accounting of public spending on public service media .
Critics argue the move mirrors tactics seen in Slovakia and risks enabling government control over editorial content. Analyst Filip Rožánek told Deník N that the government cherry-picks Western examples to justify the reform while ignoring broader implications for media independence. Political scientist Klára Smejkal of Masaryk University said state budget financing could work but depends heavily on the political culture .
The government has already faced accusations of undermining public broadcasters. A ruling coalition lawmaker from the SPD party, Josef Nerušil, publicly called for state control over the content of Czech Television and Czech Radio, prompting sharp rebukes from both opposition parties and government ministers. “He’s evidently living on another planet,” Culture Minister Oto Klempíř said in response .
The Ministry of Culture has now asked the European Commission whether the proposed funding model constitutes illegal state aid that would require notification under EU rules. The question is included in the explanatory memorandum to the draft law submitted to the government on Monday .
- 3
- 2
- 1
1 further source not geolocated



