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CBC host Travis Dhanraj says he was 'silenced' and 'forced to resign' after raising systemic issues

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Former CBC News host Travis Dhanraj said he had no choice but to resign from the broadcaster after he raised systemic issues related to lack of diversity of opinion and editorial independence and was stonewalled by his employer. His lawyer says he intends to sue the public broadcaster.

Lawyer for former Canada Tonight host says he plans to sue the public broadcaster

CBC News

· Posted: Jul 07, 2025 8:39 PM EDT | Last Updated: 9 minutes ago

Travis Dhanraj, former host of CBC's nightly news program Canada Tonight.

In a note to fellow CBC staff, former Canada Tonight host Travis Dhanraj claimed he was 'sidelined' and 'silenced' and had no choice but to resign after he raised issues at the public broadcaster, such as a lack of diversity of opinion and editorial imbalance in its political coverage. (CBC)

Former CBC News host Travis Dhanraj said he had no choice but to resign from the broadcaster after he raised systemic issues related to lack of diversity of opinion and editorial independence and was stonewalled by his employer. His lawyer says he intends to sue the public broadcaster.

In an internal note to fellow CBC staff sent out Monday morning, Dhanraj said he decided to leave the broadcaster after his questioning of some of the CBC's editorial decisions and the "gap between CBC's stated values and its internal reality" was met with resistance.

"This was not a voluntary decision." he wrote in the farewell message sent to various CBC group email addresses from his CBC account.

"When I pushed for honest conversations about systemic issues and editorial imbalance, I was shut out. Sidelined. Silenced. And ultimately, erased."

He accused his employer of "tokenism masquerading as diversity, problematic political coverage protocols, and the erosion of editorial independence" and said he had to "navigate a workplace culture defined by retaliation, exclusion, and psychological harm."

CBC 'categorically rejects' allegations

In an emailed statement, CBC spokesperson Kerry Kelly said the Crown corporation "categorically rejects" Dhanraj's allegations about what led to his departure, including the assertion in his email to staff that he had been "forced to resign."

Kelly did not elaborate on Dhanraj's resignation or the reason he went on leave earlier this year; nor did she comment on his specific claims about editorial independence and newsroom culture at CBC. She said the broadcaster is limited in what it can say because of "privacy and confidentiality considerations." 

"We are saddened to see this public attack on the integrity of CBC News," Kelly said.

Dhanraj also posted a Google form on the social media site X earlier Monday in which he asked people to leave their contact information so he could keep them informed about the case.

"When the time is right, I'll pull the curtain back," he wrote on the form. "I'll share everything…I'll tell you what is really happening inside the walls of your CBC."

The post was later removed.

When CBC News reached out to Dhanraj's Toronto-based lawyer, Kathryn Marshall, to ask if he intends to sue the broadcaster, she responded with a one-word answer: "Yes."

She earlier told the Toronto Star that Dhanraj also plans to file a complaint with the Canadian Human Rights Commission.

Previously worked at CP24, CTV, Global

Born in Alberta, Dhanraj was a general assignment reporter for CBC Edmonton and CBC Toronto before leaving for positions at CP24, Global News and CTV News.

He returned to CBC in 2021 as a senior parliamentary reporter and later hosted Marketplace and Canada Tonight

Speculation began swirling in February when Dhanraj was abruptly no longer appearing on air and Canada Tonight was replaced by Ian Hanomansing's Hanomansing Tonight.

Travis Dhanraj is shown in this undated handout image.

Dhanraj had held various reporting and hosting positions at CBC and prior to that worked at CTV, Global and CP24. He said the decision to leave CBC was not voluntary. (Handout/CBC/The Canadian Press)

CBC confirmed at the time that Dhanraj was on leave but did not provide additional details. Dhanraj's lawyer said the leave was related to "ongoing systemic issues" at the broadcaster.

The first public sign of tension surfaced a few months earlier when Dhanraj posted on X in April 2024 that he had requested an interview with then CBC president Catherine Tait after new funding for the public broadcaster was announced in the federal budget.

Tait had been in the crosshairs of MPs and media over CBC's decision to approve executive bonuses and contradictory claims about whether the staff cuts it had announced in December 2023 were on account of being asked by Ottawa to cut its budget.

According to a copy of his resignation letter published by the Toronto Sun, Dhanraj said CBC launched an investigation over that post and asked him to sign a non-disclosure agreement, which he said he refused to do.

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