[Update at end of post]
The proprietors and editors have been mostly of one voice: the recommendations coming out of the Leveson Inquiry would have grave consequences for our allegedly free and fearless press. There would be state control. There would be censorship. Journalists would be subject to all manner of restraint on their reporting, and, worst of all, it was all the fault of people who resort to takeaway pizza.
The proprietors and editors have been mostly of one voice: the recommendations coming out of the Leveson Inquiry would have grave consequences for our allegedly free and fearless press. There would be state control. There would be censorship. Journalists would be subject to all manner of restraint on their reporting, and, worst of all, it was all the fault of people who resort to takeaway pizza.
That's what I think of youse bladdy Leveson Report, ya bastard Pommie drongoes!
However, and here we encounter a significantly sized
however, there was, as Captain Blackadder might have observed, only one thing
wrong with this idea – it was bollocks. Leveson specifically excluded any form
of censorship – or prior restraint, as it is more politely called – and sought
to continue and protect press freedom. That wasn’t what the owners and editors
were really about.
No, what they didn’t want to happen was to lose control of
press regulation – their ability to mark their own homework, and backed up by
turning to the lawyers to fend off attempts to wring apologies, or even
corrections, out of them. And those lawyers are doubly useful: they allow the
press to censor other media outlets. Free speech is, for the most powerful of
the Fourth Estate, a moveable feast.
So how does this work? Happily – or maybe not – Creepy Uncle
Rupe has today provided us with a text-book example. As Zelo Street noted
a few days ago, the BBC had scheduled a Panorama
expose of Mazher Mahmood, aka the Fake Sheikh, whose successful sting
operations had
recently been brought down by the discovery that
he had been lying and manipulating evidence.
Update of this photo may have to wait
News has arrived on Zelo Street – sorry, no names, no
packdrill – to tell that the attempt by the Murdoch empire to prevent the
programme going out tomorrow evening has just proved successful. So, yes, that
means censoring free speech is fine, providing the BBC is the target (see also
under Channel 4). Most of Rupe’s pals in the press will keep schtum. What was
that about “chilling effects”?
The only chance of getting anything like the whole story
will be when the Guardian and Independent report on it. The justification
used to gag Panorama will probably
revolve around the possibility that Mahmood’s identity would be revealed, with
the Murdoch press arguing that this would put him in danger – just like other
members of the public, then – and it would be commercially damaging to them.
One could argue that it is a moot point: Mahmood’s
commercial value has already been effectively expended by the discovery of his
dishonesty, and there is bugger all public interest being served by entrapping
a parade of slebs into arranging drug deals. But what it exposes is the rank
hypocrisy of the press: free speech is, for them, the freedom to please
themselves, and anyone else can go hang.
That’s something to
think about next time they start blubbering about Leveson.
[UPDATE 1925 hours: Roy Greenslade at the Guardian has now confirmed what Zelo Street has already told you - that the lawyers have stopped the Fake Sheikh edition of Panorama being broadcast.
The good news is that the Beeb expects to broadcast anyway - but with John Sweeney's expose delayed by no more than a week. Remember folks, you read it here first]
[UPDATE 1925 hours: Roy Greenslade at the Guardian has now confirmed what Zelo Street has already told you - that the lawyers have stopped the Fake Sheikh edition of Panorama being broadcast.
The good news is that the Beeb expects to broadcast anyway - but with John Sweeney's expose delayed by no more than a week. Remember folks, you read it here first]
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