The so-called Taxpayers’ Alliance has suffered a setback:
this Astroturf lobby group, which proudly declares itself to be “Britain’s independent grassroots campaign
for lower taxes”, has long been known to have no discernible grassroots.
Now, in a ruling from the BBC Trust, it has also been found not to be “non-partisan”, but an organisation with
a political affiliation.
Officially partisan: guff from Tufton Street
This last has been known for years: the TPA is part of the
Conservative Movement in the UK, even if it is not formally aligned with the
Tory Party. Its alumni have worked their way into mainstream Conservative
circles: Susie Squire working for Young Dave and Mark Wallace at Conservative
Home are two such. Its sponsorship of the 2012 Conservative Renewal Conference was noted
at this blog.
So it was no surprise here on Zelo Street when a complaint was made following a 5 live drive item last April, which
featured the TPA’s humourless CEO Jonathan Isaby. The complaint told that “Isaby from the TaxPayers' Alliance was allowed
to comment ... as if he was part of a 'non-partisan body' ... [the TPA] is largely financed by private wealthy
donors and is 'at the heart of Conservative Party policy lobbying'”.
The TPA will probably contest the inclusion of the word “Party” in that assertion, but otherwise
the complainant had it spot on. So what was the Trust’s verdict? “The trust committee ruled that the programme
breached impartiality guidelines because the audience 'should have been made
aware of the political nature of the organisation'”. That means the TPA
gets a health warning in future.
And, as the man
said, there’s more: “[The Trust] also
judged that there was 'a need for content producers to take particular care in
considering when signposting of contributors' credentials is required'”.
That would be a bold and underline applied to the health warning. The Beeb’s
online version of Ariel, its in-house
information source, summed it up in one paragraph.
“The BBC needs to be better at telling its audience
when a contributor has a vested interest in a subject or is affiliated with a
pressure group or think tank, says BBC Trust”. So what has
the TPA to say for itself, given that the BBC Trust gave its verdict yesterday?
The answer to that one, thus far, is nothing, zero, zilch, nada, not a sausage,
and bugger all.
Jonathan Isaby’s Twitter feed, and that of the TPA, are
silent on the complaint. The only thing posted on their website today is
another whinge about HS2, a cause they have now well and truly lost. So it has
to be assumed that they will not be contesting the BBC Trust decision, and
agree with the description of “the political
nature of the organisation”. Let joy
be unconfined.
Hopefully other broadcasters will follow suit. Call the TPA for what it is.
I hope that they make the same ruling about Migration Watch, which classes itself as an "independent and non-political body established in October 2001. Our purposes are to; monitor migration flows to and from the UK" , but has a political agenda - the reduction of immigration.
ReplyDeleteOr just, like, stop calling them. If you want to hear what a Tory has to say, call an actual Tory. Let the TPA wither down to rent-a-quotes for the Murdoch press.
ReplyDeleteBC is right about Migration Watch. It was described as an "Immigration Pressure Group" on one recent programme. Well, yes, so is the BNP!
ReplyDelete