The public hearings of the federal government’s media inquiry got under way this morning with a distinctly anti-statutory regulation tinge.
Robert Manne reprised his concerns about News Limited’s conduct, the dominance of the Murdoch Press and its impact on civic health. And the inquiry heard from Deakin University’s Dr Martin Hirst and former ABC producer Ivo Burum.
All agreed, with different emphases, that the “marketplace of ideas” (a concept that got a thorough workout in questions from inquiry head Ray Finkelstein, QC) was not working all that well.
Hirst asserted that only a narrow range of political points of view gets a run in the mainstream media. Manne talked about the “big mistake” of the Hawke-Keating government in the 1980s in allowing Murdoch to gain such dominance of the Australian media scene.
But what should be done about it?
None of the witnesses advocated increased statutory regulation of the media. Far from advocating the licensing of newspapers, Hirst said he would consider removing the licensing of broadcast media, since the justification for this was spectrum scarcity, which was no longer an issue in the digital age.
Manne, under questioning from inquiry heads Finkelstein and Matthew Ricketson, advocated an increased role for the Australian Press Council. He rejected suggestions of giving it the power to fine journalists, but saw a role in it brokering issues of right of reply, and possibly mandating the publication of corrections.
A beefed-up self-regulatory presence, founded on the Press Council, is an area of emerging consensus in the submissions to the inquiry published so far. The questions that are outstanding include whether it should be government funded, and how internet sites (such as Crikey) might be either made or encouraged to sign up.
Manne said he had no problem with the idea that a proprietor would express his or her bias through their media outlets. He just thought there should be more diversity. Breaking up the Murdoch empire in Australia might give diversity a chance.
Manne has also undertaken to provide the inquiry with a printout of comments defamatory of himself and Tim Flanney from News Limited blogs. This capacity to publish casual defamations was, he said, something new to which the inquiry might well want to turn its attention.
The witnesses agreed that the internet opens up new possibilities for citizens to inform themselves and participate in media but that so far this was a “molehill” compared to the mainstream media.
But an area of government action, congruent with NBN policy, might be to encourage alternatives in new media, with Hirst and Burum showcasing a project under which they are training Aborignal Australians in the Northern Territory to use mobile media technology to tell their own stories.
An interesting line of questioning from Finkelstein was on the “marketplace of ideas” concept. Did it capture the justification for freedom of speech? Hirst disliked the idea, saying it characterised citizens as consumers, rather than as participants in democracy.
At the time of writing, Crikey publisher Eric Beecher has just begun his presentation. This afternoon the inquiry will also hear from Crikey founder Stephen Mayne.
UPDATE:
The head of the federal government media inquiry, Ray Finkelstein QC, has floated the idea of a compulsory levy on media organisations to be used to fund a beefed up Australian Press Council.
In questioning Crikey publisher Eric Beecher, Finkelstein said he had thought of an alternative to government funding of the Australian Press Council, which had been proposed by Beecher. “I see no alternative,” said Beecher.
“Well I’ve thought of one,” said Finkelstein. He suggested the Government make a levy compulsory, calculated on either revenue or audience size.
Beecher responded that such a levy might be unpayable by small media outlets, including blogs that had no revenue. It might work as a disincentive to entering the market.
I can’t seem to find the company referenced above “Hirst and Burum”
I would like to find out more about that program…
I think one of the most important things here-which apparently the good judge agreed with-is that the laws of defamation are only available to the very rich and that is quite unique when citizens basically can access the law on every other matter.
Now that is not a surprise! Ray Finkelstein QC . Has suggested the Government make a levy compulsory, calculated on either revenue or audience size. I have no doubt government would like to pin down individual public trust journalist. Sites such as Crikey and the WWW generally are the peoples public square. While government and the courts may still have their ways to put us in the stocks in that square. We the people have access to the WWW and freedom of expression, except where governments have already smashed that freedom down with the assistance of corporate interest some of them belonging to governments. I hope Eric Beecher is in the game fighting for the freedom of expression which gave birth to our, not his CRIKEY! I subscribe for around the same cost of a Limited News subscription because of the relativly free soapbox which Crikey offers the peoples! Edward James
“Government without newspapers or newspapers without government”.
“Let a 1000 flowers bloom, a 100 schools of thought contend”.
Just don’t impose and enforce monopolies.
EdJ – how did publishing your phone number end? Attacked by trolls & flying monkeys?
@AR I have been politically active for far too long to let an MP like John Robertson the past Labor Minister for the Central Coast tell people he is listening, without firing up! He and AG John Hatzistergos who has retired from politics, both ignored published allegations of systemic corruption put directly in their hands at a Community Cabinet Meeting shortly before they were hammered on March 27 2011. I have published photos of both of them reading the allagations. I am sick of hearing about politicians having been here and there well after the fact ! Our expensive elected representatives have made an art form of hiding behind an even more expensive fire wall of staffers and media advisers. Assisted by the print media in their efforts to stage manage public political business. http://bit.ly/EJ_PNewsAds
Links to over forty published political attack ads with some instructive photos where I have identified corruption accommodated by our elected political allsorts at all three levels of our government. The allegations have been published and are in the public domain for years, where people are named in the newspaper ads I have where possible signed copies and put them in there hands. My contact details have been published for years in full and sometimes doublepage ads where I have run those stories Limited News and Fairfax were not conflicted to touch. To be frank AR I feel like I am shouting into a void Edward James 0243419140