Liberals to vote on age limits for social media, CBC reports

April 11, 2026
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What’s happening

It has been reported that members of Canada’s Liberal Party will vote today on whether they want to see age restrictions for social media platforms, CBC reports. The proposal — brought to a party forum or meeting, it has been reported — asks members whether they support limiting access for younger users as a way to curb online harms. Short and sharp: a party-level vote that could shape future policy debates.

Why it matters

Why all the fuss? Parents, clinicians and some politicians have been warning about the mental-health toll of endless feeds and viral trends. Advocates argue age gates could protect kids from harassment, addictive design and harmful content; opponents point to enforcement headaches and free-speech worries. Can party members’ preferences actually translate into workable law? That’s the hard question — and one regulators and platforms around the world have been wrestling with as they try to balance safety and practicality in the TikTok era.

What comes next

If the motion passes, expect it to feed into parliamentary discussion and potential legislative proposals, though any real change would hinge on the federal government and regulatory bodies. Tech firms will likely push back on feasibility and privacy grounds; parents and youth advocates will press for stronger protections. No guarantees — party votes steer conversation, not automatic policy — but today’s outcome could be the spark that reignites a nationwide debate about who gets a say over young people’s screens.

Sources: reddit