The ABC Media Watch program has been “dangerous and simplistic” in its criticism of News Limited CEO John Hartigan in the wake of the Pauline Hanson photograph affair, according to News Limited’s Director of Corporate Affairs, Greg Baxter.
Last night’s Media Watch program suggested Hartigan’s campaign against proposed privacy legislation had been undermined by the publication of the photos in News Limited’s Sunday tabloid newspapers.
This morning, Baxter said that Hartigan himself had no comment on Media Watch, but that:
My comment on the record is that the assertions made by Media Watch are very dangerous and simplistic. If one story becomes the reason to introduce a new law, what kind of system are they recommending? A system that would have hung the ABC over the Costello dinner conversation so studiously side-stepped by Media Watch? Hypocrisy starts with Holmes not Hartigan.
Meanwhile, the Australian Press Council has said it will not be making a public statement on the affair, because of the chance that it may come before it for adjudication. So far, no complaint has been received.
The Executive Secretary of the Council, Jack Herman, said that if a complaint was made, the issue would be whether News Limited could establish the public interest in publishing the photographs and breaching privacy.
“Did the publication reveal something about her public role or her policies? That would be the kind of issue the Council would consider,” Herman said. This was assuming that the pictures were of Hanson. If they were of some other woman, then she may in turn have grounds for complaint.
Herman said that privacy complaints were harder to substantiate for public figures, but that in its adjudication concerning Senator Bob Woods, the Council had recognised that public figures do have a right to privacy.
In that case, the Daily Telegraph published photographs taken of Woods and his wife in conversation in their backyard by a photographer standing outside the home. The Council noted that there were legitimate public interest issues involving Woods, but found that the photos were “a blatant example of a breach of privacy” and that it saw “no compelling public interest in the obtaining and publication of pictures of this kind.”
Has no one done the maths?
According to http://www.aph.gov.au/library/parl/38/mpsbyage.htm Pauline was born May 27, 1954.
It is now 2009. 1977 was 32 years ago. 1975 was 34 years ago. So according to Jack the pictures were taken 32-34 years ago, not 30 years ago.
Being born in 1954, Pauline is now 54 years old, turning 55 in May and she turned 21 in 1975 and 23 in 1977.
Why was the word teenager being used???
Media watch is a gem amongst a lot of commercial crap,
News Ltd are scum dredging opportunists and very good at it.
More power to Media Watch, and a note to News Ltd .
Please use a gentler news print, the one you use now leaves marks on my backside.
When will the media realise that by going after Pauline Hanson with smear does nothing but mobilise her supporters out there in “”Disaffected Land” and create a wave of martyrdom greater than anyone could imagine?
Many have probably forgotten that Hanson’s now famous “please explain?” came about as a response to a question from (then) 60 Minutes reporter Tracy Curro who asked her if she was a xenophobe.
People who feel left behind and marginalised in our society love nothing more than to have a hero who feels their pain – and that’s all well and good except the hero is nothing short of a wolf in sheep’s clothing who might do a reasonable job of enscapulating the marginalised ones’ disenchantment, but does far greater damage to the reputation of the country as a whole.
I was living in Canada during 1997 and recalled opening a newspaper on a train from Montreal to Toronto to read a full page account of Australia’s racism as extolled by Hanson. It wasn’t a good look.
Whenever the so-called ‘elites’ (ie media/major parties) go after Hanson in this way all they do is stoke her fire and I’m afraid, it’s we milk-mannered Queenslanders who aspire towards stable government, who could bear the brunt of their stirring should Hanson win the seat of Beaudesert AND then go on to hold the balance of power in a hung parliament.
Wish us well….
Glenn, more or less said it all. Not sure about the newsprint crack. But other three points excellent.
Greg Baxter brings to mind the Mandy Rice Davies rejoinder: Well ‘e would, wouldn’t ‘e?