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News content is determined by journalists not proprietors

By David Flint - posted Thursday, 19 October 2006


The point is that today, celebrity journalists, columnists and presenters are hired for the simple reason that they attract readers, listeners and viewers, and thus advertisers. Only the ABC doesn’t have to worry about this, which is why over 90 per cent of their celebrity political journalists come from just one part of the political spectrum.

If a proprietor were foolish enough to try to dictate to his celebrity journalists what to do, at least some of them would have the strength not to surrender. I assume the proponents of media protection laws are not saying celebrity journalists have no insides. If the proprietor insisted, some would resign or be dismissed and the inappropriate directive would leak. Other media would lead with the story - we will still have a competition law, with stronger rules against mergers today. We are just not going to have a proprietor controlling all media in a market.

The plain fact is the content of news and current affairs today is determined by journalists and not proprietors. In fact proprietors, in the sense of press barons, are a disappearing species.

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There are none at Fairfax, Channel Ten, West Australian Newspapers, of course the public broadcasters and most radio networks. And in addition, Rupert Murdoch is an absentee proprietor. The idea that he determines what appears in, say, The Australian, is preposterous. If he does, he must do this for every newspaper he owns. Now he does work hard - but he is not a superman.

In any event, journalists have become so powerful that they rule the roost, and not, for example Fairfax or indeed, the ABC board. No longer anonymous as they once were, many journalists now publish or broadcast with no editorial supervision whatsoever, as Lord Hutton found at the BBC. Alternatively their celebrity status can often ensure that any supervision is minimal. This was inconceivable 40 or 50 years ago. The potential for proprietorial control is just not there.

At the time of writing, the bill relaxing media ownership laws has passed the Senate, and is likely to become law. According to newspaper reports, Paul Keating and some of his supporters are trying to persuade the Leader of the Opposition to warn that any subsequent acquisitions will be subject to divestiture orders should Labor gain power. The proposition is breathtaking- to pass a law which retrospectively declares illegal what was perfectly lawful at the time! No rational opposition wishing to gain government would dare adopt such a policy. Even allowing it to be debated in the Caucus would be an invitation to the Coalition to make this an issue of principle.

The real issue about the media is not who owns the commercial media. A principal issue remains the way the media can best overcome bias, and the perception of bias in the news, ensuring both objectivity and that comment is identifiable as such. While this is desirable for commercial outlets if they wish to retain any credibility, it is crucial for public broadcasters, who are under the additional obligation to ensure that comment is from across the mainstream spectrum. That should be a matter of concern for Parliament.

Why aren't we trying to address the real 21st century issues, rather than something more appropriate to the middle of the last century? And let's not get sidetracked by whether or not there should be minimum local content on regional radio - this is an entirely separate issue from ownership. The partial relaxation of controls on ownership does not of course go far enough, but realpolitic considerations determine these things.

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About the Author

David Flint is a former chairman of the Australian Press Council and the Australian Broadcasting Authority, is author of The Twilight of the Elites, and Malice in Media Land, published by Freedom Publishing. His latest monograph is Her Majesty at 80: Impeccable Service in an Indispensable Office, Australians for Constitutional Monarchy, Sydney, 2006

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