The police investigation into phone-hacking by the now
defunct News of the World newspaper is a story that just won’t go away. This
week saw the first court appearance of its former editor Rebekah Brooks, one of
23 people currently being investigated by 45 police officers under the London
Met’s Operation Weeting. With costs already exceeding £40 million and with an
estimated 6,349 potential victims to investigate, it is likely that the legal
settlements are likely to extend into the years ahead.
Yet to what extent is the British public aware of its
repercussions? The Leveson Inquiry, set up by Prime Minister David Cameron to
examine the culture, practices of the British press appeared to many as a forum
for famous people to explain how the press had disrupted their lives. The
testimonies of victims like Sienna Miller and Steve Coogan, to newspaper
insiders like Piers Morgan and most notably Rupert Murdoch provided an interesting
examination and on occasion devilish detail, but for the public as a whole, it
did no more.
Yet, this November, Lord Justice Leveson will provide a
report into his findings and more notably some policy suggestions into how the
British press should be run.
Press freedom is perhaps not one of the most exhilarating of
topics, but it does represent one of the fundamental principles of an open
democracy. To the proprietors and editors, any statutory rule in place which
governed how UK media is legislated would be deemed an infringement on the
rights on the freedom of the press. Most people accept this argument; Britain
would not want to be seen as the only country in Western Europe with
restrictions on what the press can and cannot print.
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Lord Justice Levson - will his findings bear fruit? (Telegraph) |
However; it is frankly clear that the current parameters in
place do not work. The Press Complaints Commission (PCC), a self-governing
body, has been hopelessly inadequate in addressing genuine complaints and
policing predatory journalism. In fact, Richard Desmond, owner of the Daily
Express and The Daily Star, two newspapers with a combined daily circulation of
around 1.3 million copies, never signed up to it. The newspaper industry may
seethe at any possibility of government intervention but for too long it has
been poor at doing the fundamentals itself.
Some commentators said that the finger cannot wholly be
pointed at the newspaper industry. For some, the sensationalist agenda many
newspapers took was subject to its audience. The British public for a long time
found the trivialities of minor celebrities part of their daily discourse. The
newspaper editors were more than happy to meet these demands. Yet if you take
into consideration that newspaper circulation in the UK has been declining
since the 1960s, then the argument becomes flawed.
As social and cultural habits evolved, more and more people
got their news on television or radio. For newspaper editors, taking more risks
and providing even juicier scandals was a way of negating this loss. Setting
the agenda and driving comment was taken at any cost, even if it meant hacking
into the phone of a missing-later-murdered schoolgirl. It should not detract
from the quality of parts of the British newspaper industry, but the levels
that many editors sunk to, revealed the nadir of quality journalism.
The cases of the past few weeks have highlighted these
inadequacies. Firstly, the report into the Hillsborough disaster showed journalism
at its worse and the poor habits that defamed the memories of 96 innocent fans
over 23 years ago. Secondly, the printing of the topless photos of the Duchess
of Cambridge. Although not printed in any UK publication, it shows the extent
that people will go to make a story.
A landscape with a statutory framework would perhaps not be
as draconian as it sounds, but would certainly intend journalists to remodel
how they approach stories. For many, who for years were hounded by journalists
looking for a simple story, it is a case of accountability rather than state
intervention.
All newspapers and most politicians would not be in favour
of statutory regulation, mainly because they do not believe it is in the State’s
interest to be involved in policing such matters. The question left over is to
what extent are the press capable at looking after themselves? Historical precedent
suggests not, and reform of an internal system would simply delay further mischief
in years to come.
It is unlikely to become a vote winning strategy, nor
losing, but at the same time the public are fully aware of the unfairness that
some news organisations have been involved in.
Newspapers are not the same types of institutions they were
10 or even 50 years ago. Not only must they face the challenges of the digital
age, as well as the competition of the licence fee but they must learn to adapt
to climate of new forms of journalism. Leveson’s suggestions may be overruled
and the PCC ultimately strengthened, but it still does not deflect that
newspapers must adapt both culturally and economically or its printing presses
will be seriously overhauled or stopped.