After
weeks of huffing and puffing, the coalition government in the UK has finally
unveiled its plans for a new regulator for the press following the Leveson
recommendations. Having said he accepted them, the UK PM set out to walk out a tight
rope, placating the families of the victims of the phone hacking scandal while
negotiating with media barons.
The
anti-Leveson camp upped the ante by running in advance of the publication of
the report a vicious campaign against the anticipated changes, focusing in
particular on the legislative underpinnings of any new watchdog, describing
them as a Mugabe-like end of press freedom. The PM himself was forced to say
that any Leveson law would be like crossing a Rubicon and end centuries of
press freedom.
In
the ensuing furore, media moguls splintered in different directions. Lord Hunt,
the current Press Complaint Commission chair, surrounded by legal and policy
advisers, led efforts to create a successor body to the discredited press
regulator. Editor of the Daily Mail,
Paul Dacre, fought a lone battle with his proposal for a new system of press
cards to license journalists which he argued will help to transform the
regulation of journalistic behaviour. Lord Black, executive director of the
Telegraph Media Group, emerged as the eminence grise of the newspaper industry
following his successful campaign, the Free Speech Network, to demonise
legislative underpinning. However his contract plan relying on civil law, while
largely welcomed by the industry, started losing ground.
At
the same time, the three main political parties started their all-party
consultations which dragged on for weeks and finally ran into the sand. All
this ferment was getting nowhere, some even arguing over the minutia of the
differences between self-regulation and independent regulation, and, as we were
then truly in the smoke and mirrors stage so beloved of the Westminster
machine, Cabinet minister Oliver Letwin came in with his alternative, a royal
press charter.
The
proposals included some fresh thinking such as a new regulator, with real teeth
and investigatory powers and the ability to bypass the courts to settle libel
and privacy cases swiftly and cheaply, that it can deal with third party
complaints, provide an arbitration process in relation to civil claims for alleged
libel and privacy breaches and even levy fines up to £1m and exemplary damages
for breaches of privacy.
However
proposals that the new watchdog would be audited by a recognition body – a sort of verifying
panel – every three years to be established by a royal charter, raised hackles
from all sides. After waging a
stubborn fight for months against statutory underpinning, now the Tory party is
proposing a regulator which could be amended at any point by the privy council,
made up of cabinet ministers – not even Parliament. “It requires some
suspension of disbelief to take seriously the notion that Conservative
ministers are now proposing that this device be used to regulate the British
press” said an editorial.
Party
managers are again huddled in cross-party talks that seem to be going nowhere.
If the prospect for a royal charter bites the dust, there may still be room for
other proposals for legislation emerging in particular from the majority in Parliament
in favour of the full Leveson recommendations.
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