You cannot hope to bribe or
twist
thank God! The British
journalist
But seeing what the man will
do
unbribed,
there’s no occasion to (Humbert
Wolfe)
In July
2011, and in the wake of the News
International phone-hacking scandal, David Cameron set up an Inquiry into
the ‘Culture, Practice and Ethics’
of the Press. This Inquiry, the Leveson Inquiry, has recently completed its
formal hearings and is expected to publish its recommendations in November.
What did Lord Justice Leveson hear and what should he now recommend?
Leveson
heard evidence from 474 witnesses of whom over 200 were classed as ‘media’
or ‘PR’.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, many of these were extremely wary - even suspicious -
of the Inquiry and of the recommendations which might emerge from it. Some
referred to it as a ‘show trial’,
while others feared that it would (and will) result in recommendations for
extensive curbs on press freedom. Mr Michael Gove MP, himself a former
journalist, went so far as to claim
that the very existence of the Inquiry had a ‘chilling
effect’Gove on Leveson's "chilling effect". He advised Leveson to avoid recommending additional legislation, and
he told the court that ‘freedom of
speech doesn’t mean
anything unless some people are going to be offended some of the time’.
Well, we
can all agree on the importance of free speech, but before endorsing Mr Gove’s
advice to Leveson, let’s pause for
a moment and remember how we got here. The Leveson Inquiry was not set up
because the press had offended some people (though it had). It was set up
because significant sections of the press had used their freedom to: intercept
the voicemail of a murdered teenager, make corrupt payments to the police,
publish the private diary of a bereaved mother, and disclose the medical
records of a Prime Minister’s son. They
had also - allegedly - conspired to pervert the course of justice. All this is
a very long way indeed from ‘causing
offence to some people’, and Mr
Gove must surely know that it is.
In
particular, he must know that the real danger in Britain today is not that
press regulation will undermine the freedom to offend. The real danger lies in
the fact that press power is concentrated in the hands of comparatively few
people, and those people have persistently used their power to benefit themselves
and their political friends, while damaging and discrediting their political
enemies. When this happens, a so-called ‘free
press’ can quickly become an
anti-democratic weapon which the powerful use to foist their own political
preferences on an under-informed electorate. That is the real danger and,
sadly, there is nothing new about it.
More than
half a century ago, giving evidence to the 1947 Royal Commission on the Press,
the National Union of Journalists (no less) conceded that only restriction of
liberty would remedy the abuses of the press which were prevalent at that time.
The same abuses are even more prevalent now, and it falls to Lord Justice
Leveson finally to call a halt to them. My own hope is that he will recommend
an end to the farce of self-regulation which is the Press Complaints Commission, and a strengthening of the existing anti-monopoly laws which did
nothing to contain Rupert Murdoch's ambition and which almost allowed him to
gain control of BSkyB. It is here, if anywhere, that hope for freedom lies.
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Professor Sue Mendus |
Sue Mendus is Morrell Professor Emerita at the University of York.
Her departmental webpage can be found here. In 2004 she was elected a Fellow of the British Academy, and from 2008 to 2012 she was Vice President (Social Sciences) of the Academy. She is a Founding Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales.
Her written and
oral evidence to the Leveson Inquiry can be found here: http://www.levesoninquiry.org.uk/hearing/2012-07-16am/
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