Swiss to vote on right-wing push to slash licence fee for public broadcaster. 13 hours ago. Imogen FoulkesIn Bern. Reuters. Swiss voters go to the polls this weekend to decide whether to reduce sharply the annual licence fee for their national broadcaster.. The fee for the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation has already been cut in recent years but currently costs 335 Swiss francs (£320; $435) per household a year. That is higher than in neighbouring Germany (£190) and Austria (£160).. If the proposal is passed, the Swiss fee would decrease to 200 francs (£190; $260), annually, and businesses would be exempt.. The move is backed by the right-wing Swiss People’s Party, which argues the current cost is unjustified when Swiss citizens are struggling with the cost of living crisis.. The party also questions SBC’s efficiency. “In the 21st Century, programmes can be produced much more cheaply than 30 or 40 years ago,” People’s Party member of parliament Manfred Bühler told Swiss media. “Two hundred francs really is enough.”. With younger people in particular turning to streaming companies, early opinion polls pointed to a close vote, with many Swiss asking whether their national broadcaster needs to do as much as it does.. But opponents of the move say much of the licence fee goes on ensuring all four Swiss languages – German, French, Italian and Romantsch – are represented.. All four have their own radio and television channels, and each broadcasts national and local news daily.. Fabian Molina, member of parliament for the Social Democrats, fears cuts to the licence fee would undermine Switzerland’s “national cohesion”, where all regions and linguistic communities are supposed to be treated equally.. Daniela Porcelli/Getty Images. He also worries about the impact on SBC’s coverage of foreign news. The broadcaster maintains correspondents in the US, Russia, China, the Middle East and Latin America, as well as in Brussels, Berlin, Paris, Rome and London.. “As a neutral country we have a unique perspective on the world, and only our correspondents can bring that back home to people,” Molina said.. The SBC has warned of hundreds of job losses if a cut to the licence fee is approved, and said the organisation’s coverage of news and sport would be reduced dramatically.. Unlike many other European countries, including the UK, where top league football has switched to private broadcasters requiring subscription fees, the SBC still broadcasts plenty of football, as well as all the winter sports at which the Swiss excel.. Until just a few weeks ago, it looked as if voters might be ready to back the cut.. Then came intervention from an unexpected source. Writing in the German version of Russian state-backed news outlet RT, someone calling himself Hans-Ueli Läppli called on the Swiss to back cutting the licence fee. The name is so cliched as to be almost certainly a pseudonym.. The writer accused SBC of “Russophobia… selective reporting, moralising on politica