LUCKHURST – NOT WAVING
BUT DROWNING
The Hacked Off
campaign has
commissioned an online poll from YouGov to gauge the public mood on future
press regulation. The sample size was relatively large, at over 2,800
respondents. The responses obtained demonstrate that the idea that few care
about this issue is at best questionable, and at worst utter claptrap. Over
three quarters preferred an independent regulator backed by law.
By two to one, respondents trusted Lord Justice Leveson to “make fair and effective recommendations”.
Over three quarters said it was not acceptable in the wake of recent events for
owners and editors to control the complaints system. As to whether the
Government should implement Leveson’s recommendations, the margin of approval
was almost ten to one.
As to the correction of inaccurate stories, 68% said papers
should do more to ensure this happened, against 9% who did not. These numbers
are not merely in favour of a system different to what exists today. They
demonstrate that the public has lost faith in the newspaper industry’s ability
to keep its own house in order. The drinking in that mythical last chance
saloon has gone on long enough.
Sadly, this news has not been universally well received by
those in and around journalism, and especially our old friend Professor Tim
Luckhurst, who must be causing those at the University of Kent to wonder if it
would not be better for all concerned if he were to just keep schtum, especially on Twitter. The Prof
has found forthrightly and adversely on the poll.
His comments on the size of the majority in favour of an
independent regulator started with “yes,
but hanging” and quickly moved to denounce the poll as “propaganda”. Hacked Off, he asserted, were wrong. Former Daily Star man Rich Peppiatt was denounced as a “Marxist” (predictable, as he had already
called me an “Authoritarian”). There
would be an end to press freedom.
Statutory framework would mean more Government interference.
Ofcom meant impartiality would be imposed (it wouldn’t, of course – Luckhurst deliberately
selects a feature of the broadcast regime, rather than the way it operates).
Campaigning papers would be silenced as if by diktat. But this is complete
crap, and the Prof chooses yet again not to address the real issues.
The present system allowed the Daily Mail to carry out a thoroughly wicked campaign against the
Taylor sisters and get away with it. It excuses the likes of Richard Littlejohn
when he lies, on the grounds that “it’s
comment so that’s OK”. It does nothing about the packs of journos pursuing
young women. It does nothing about Islamophobia. It provides no adequate
redress. That’s not good enough.
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