[Update at end of post]
The Government has decided to delay pressing ahead with the Royal Charter for press regulation – the one that enjoys all-party support – and instead, the Privy Council will next week consider the Charter submitted by the press as an alternative, which, as any fule kno, is merely a re-heating of the discredited Press Complaints Commission (PCC), supposedly to head off further legal action.
The Government has decided to delay pressing ahead with the Royal Charter for press regulation – the one that enjoys all-party support – and instead, the Privy Council will next week consider the Charter submitted by the press as an alternative, which, as any fule kno, is merely a re-heating of the discredited Press Complaints Commission (PCC), supposedly to head off further legal action.
That Culture Secretary Maria Miller was about to make this
decision was known to Zelo Street almost two days ago, and
the appearance of yet another roadblock is par for this particular course. And
something I can say is that those who were likely to be disappointed by the
delay have already experienced their disappointment, but are not about to be
diverted from their purpose.
So with their Royal Charter being looked at first, where are
the cheerleaders of the Fourth Estate? The answer is that they aren’t. Their
Royal Charter is going to the Privy Council, yet the Murdoch, Rothermere,
Barclay Brothers and Desmond hacks are effectively mute. And that is for one
good reason: that the press Charter is being considered is effectively no more
than a procedural device.
And there’s the rub: what Government sources are saying is
that only one Charter can be considered at once, and this means their own
Charter cannot yet proceed. Not being an expert on our (unwritten)
Constitution, I have to yield to others on this point, but this explanation has
not convinced the unwavering Brian Cathcart and the rest of the Hacked Off team.
Hence their
letter today to Maria Miller, signed by several victims of a variety of
press abuses: Kate and Gerry McCann, Christopher Jefferies, J K Rowling, Jacqui
Hames, Sheryl Gascoigne and Alex Best are among those endorsing the call for
the Charter agreed by Parliament to go forward without further delay. The
letter also noted that Ms Miller has been subject to a highly personal and
negative press campaign.
That was exemplified by a typically mean spirited hatchet
job to the personal order of Paul Dacre by the odious Quentin Letts (let’s
not), with “A
Culture Secretary who has been promoted way beyond her talents. Worse: she's a
bore. QUENTIN LETTS asks... What is the point of Maria Miller?” and “Does
Mrs Miller the prosaic plodder deserve chivalry?” headlines typical of
the genre.
Well, now that Lord Justice Leveson has
agreed to appear before the Commons culture Committee as early as July 24 –
that’s three weeks today – there would be no point in delaying matters for long
after that, summer recess or no, unless there were something seismic to come
out of that Committee meeting. Once again, it’s time to ignore the sniping and
do the right thing by the public.
And that right thing is properly independent press
regulation. No ifs, no buts.
[UPDATE 1645 hours: now that Leveson has made his offer to appear before MPs on 24 July, they have decided that, as so many of them have commitments, the appearance will have to be rescheduled. So much for all the press bluster that Leveson was running scared of appearing.
Instead, he has succeeded in calling the politicians' bluff, and in the process showed that pundits like the ridiculous Trevor Kavanagh are merely obeying "His Master's Voice" while churning out inane blether on the subject. Round One to the Judge, then]
[UPDATE 1645 hours: now that Leveson has made his offer to appear before MPs on 24 July, they have decided that, as so many of them have commitments, the appearance will have to be rescheduled. So much for all the press bluster that Leveson was running scared of appearing.
Instead, he has succeeded in calling the politicians' bluff, and in the process showed that pundits like the ridiculous Trevor Kavanagh are merely obeying "His Master's Voice" while churning out inane blether on the subject. Round One to the Judge, then]
1 comment:
Off topic, Tim.
But I see your mate Rob Wilson's on good form today. Wants the NAO to send him stuff so he can decide whether it's fraud and send it to the police.
I will be disappointed if we don't get a post of the usual excellent standard about him.
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