How to regulate opinion while the televised debates are radicalized?
"
This is a subject on which we are going to open a reflection
", said Monday morning at the microphone of France Inter, Roch-Olivier Maistre, the president of the Superior council of audio-visual (CSA).
Guarantor of respect for pluralism on television and radio, the regulator today finds itself faced with a real headache.
Until now, the CSA had for mission to ensure the balance of the speaking time of the political formations and the people engaged publicly.
The rules of the game were clear.
Ségolène Royal on LCI
The shift in opinion, and its corollary, the growing influence of editorial writers in the media sphere, are however shaking up this regulatory framework.
The whole question is to know if the CSA must, in the future, take into account the speaking time of men or women who are not political personalities stricto sensu but whose remarks are incontestably political.
And what about speakers
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