Canada eligible to join Eurovision competition
Canada is now eligible to participate in the Eurovision song contest after CBC/Radio-Canada became a full member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). Prime Minister Mark Carney's government explored this possibility, with the idea raised in the 2025 budget as part of efforts to strengthen ties with Europe.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedCanada is now eligible to participate in the Eurovision song contest after CBC/Radio-Canada became a full member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). Prime Minister Mark Carney's government explored this possibility, with the idea raised in the 2025 budget as part of efforts to strengthen ties with Europe. This eligibility requirement, that a country's broadcasting organization must be an EBU member, was met when CBC/Radio-Canada transitioned from an associate to a full member. Canada would join other non-European countries like Israel and Australia that regularly compete. The government had previously announced it was working with CBC to explore participation, and the 2025 budget included funding for the broadcaster.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extracted"Canada's voice in this community makes us stronger," said Noel Curran, director general of the EBU.
Israel and Australia regularly compete in Eurovision, and Morocco competed in 1980.
Prime Minister Mark Carney raised the idea of Canada joining the song contest in his 2025 budget.
CBC/Radio-Canada became a full member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), a requirement to compete.
Canada is eligible to participate in the Eurovision song contest.