AT LAST THE REPORT
So now the date has been set: Lord Justice Leveson will present his
report at around 1330 hours on Thursday November 29, at the QEII Conference
Centre, which is conveniently situated on Broad Sanctuary, opposite Westminster
Abbey and the Palace of Westminster. That makes the venue easy to find for
hacks and politicians alike, so expect lots of both to fetch up there.
Leveson will make an introductory statement, but will not
give interviews, and nor will he take questions. Some have read all sorts of
sinister motives into this news, but it is not for him to do the politicians’
job for them: they ordered the Inquiry, and Leveson is a mere functionary in
the whole scheme of things. His report, and the proposals it contains, will do
the talking.
So what will it contain? On this I generally agree with
Steve Richards, who
has written in Independent Voices
that Leveson will recommend some kind of statutory underpinning for a
totally independent form of regulation. And what frightens the Fourth Estate
here is not the statutory underpinning – after all, it never stopped the
broadcasters having their say – but the independence.
How would the new regulator operate? It could be an offshoot
of Ofcom, but without any of the requirements for impartiality that dictate
news coverage for the BBC, ITV and Sky. In other words, it would utilise an
existing organisation, perhaps with a “press
panel”, if you will, and therefore incur only a marginal cost to whoever
has to pick up the tab. This could be set
up within weeks.
Some of the existing PCC codes of conduct – those that many
papers are so keen to ignore whenever it suits them – could be adapted and
incorporated, but this time there will be no backsliding, no wriggling out of
potentially difficult complaints, no fobbing off claimants by pretending that
forthright dishonesty and smears count as fair comment, and no allowing papers
to submit evidence unchallenged.
And that takes us back to the I-word: independence. This
frightens editors as nothing else, as it would remove for ever their ability to
manipulate the regulator. An advisory function for those editors and their
journalists would be fine, but not a decision making one. Lord Black’s
proposals, once
again trailed in the Maily Telegraph,
do not bring this. That’s why his “PCC 2”
is not good enough.
The only fly in this particular ointment is that certain
parties will get a sight of the report before publication. As those parties
include Party Politicians, expect the news to be leaked to a slavering and
baying Fourth Estate. But it’s too late: Young Dave can’t kick this one into
the long grass for long. Some of his party might turn on him if he adopts
Leveson’s proposals, but the voters will
finish him off if he doesn’t.
No comments:
Post a Comment