PRESS FREEDOM WITH
UNDERPINNING
This morning, the editors – less the not insignificant
presence of the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre – fetched up on Downing Street and
filed in to see Young Dave, with the supposed intention of setting up a
properly independent regulator without the statutory underpinning that Leveson
proposed. Cameron is said to have given them the jolly hard word on sorting
themselves out.
So a regulator underpinned by statute is a bad thing, then? This
is certainly the view put forward by whingeing Tim Luckhurst, professor of
journalism at the University of Kent, who has quite clearly spelled out that
statute equals loss of free speech, no free press, and censorship. No democrat,
in his view, would sign up to such a thing, because they love freedom so much.
Sad so say, though, Luckhurst is talking out of the back of
his neck, and here I am able to cite Reporters
Without Borders (for Freedom of Information) in support. They have released
their 2011-2012
Press Freedom Index, which has
awarded Syria, Bahrain and Yemen the worst rankings – to no surprise at all –
while giving equal top spot to Norway and Finland.
Yes, Finland – a country which has an independent press
regulator underpinned by statute. Maybe this is some kind of fluke: after all,
groups like Hacked Off also cited
Denmark and Ireland, which have a similar arrangement, and Luckhurst has
condemned the latter as “not priz[ing]
liberty as it should”. And he
stresses that underpinning and regulation are somehow interchangeable.
So back we go to that Press
Freedom Index, to see that Denmark comes out equal tenth and Ireland
fifteenth. But what of the UK, and moreover, what of the USA, where there is
supposedly no restraint on the Fourth Estate? Ah well. I have bad news for the
Prof from Canterbury: neither country makes it into the top fifteen. They both
lag well behind the three that practice statutory underpinning.
Worse, between Ireland at number 15 and the UK at 28 are
Jamaica, Costa Rica, Namibia, Surinam and Mali, with Niger only one place
further back. And the United States is way back at number 47. So Tim Luckhurst
would have the UK aspire to be 19 places lower in the Press Freedom Index and openly sneers at the country that tops the
table – and two others in the top fifteen.
Luckhurst is reminiscent of those Republican politicians who
substituted belief in place of reality in the run-up to the 2012 Presidential
Election, only to be dismayed when they lost, while everyone who had been
looking at real world information was not. He is so damn sure of his
righteousness, but every time some factual pointer emerges, it leaves him looking yet more foolish.
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