Press gallery veteran — and Australia’s most trusted journalist — Laurie Oakes was correct when he told the Melbourne Press Club’s Press Freedom Dinner on Friday night that the Australian media have failed to respond effectively to threats to press freedom.
By and large, the media’s coverage of the government’s anti-terror laws, which have established new offences relating to whistleblowers and journalists and will shortly provide a vast trove of data for agencies to exploit, has been too little, too late.
Data retention, for example, has been on the public policy agenda since at least 2012. Yet the mainstream media only belatedly woke up to the fact that it will enable the authorities to hunt down whistleblowers and journalists. In-depth coverage of the issues, and the threat to media freedom, was left for the most part to Crikey, the tech press, and, once it was established locally, The Guardian.
Oakes singled out The Australian for criticism. It’s true that The Australian, which purports to support a free press and free speech, was extraordinarily hypocritical in its support for the extensions of already-draconian anti-terrorism laws.
But the Oz was by no means alone: all major outlets have devoted too few resources and given too low a priority to the relentless march of national security agencies in Australia. Too little attention has been paid to the way the so-called “balance” between freedom and security only ever tips in favour of the latter. Too little journalism has tried to test the often exaggerated, sometimes simply fictitious claims of intelligence and law enforcement agencies and their puppets in the Attorney-General’s Department. And too many journalists are content to act as stenographers for them.
Australians deserve better from their media: better national security coverage, and a media that is more determined to defend itself against attempts to curb what’s left of our press freedom.
Agreed! The importance of a free press cannot be understated, and yes, many of the mainstream news media have failed us, a good number of which have a distinctly and suspiciously “Murdochian” taint, probably from all the brown-nosing of excrement filled politicians. Horrible business.
The attacks on all freedoms including the fourth estates might abate now that Abbott and his khaki fixation on death cults and a terror for perceived electoral advantage have hopefully been consigned to the dustbin..The pressing issue now is government secrecy surrounding our treatment of refugees and work carried out on our behalf at sea and in the Pacific Gulag system we are financing..
One person’s fearless journalism is another’s traitorous white anting.
Government without newspapers or newspapers without government?
Choose wisely, because one of those is irrevocable.
Unfortunately we have a viewsmedia dominated by a lump more interested in doing the PR work for, peddling the virtues of one party over all others. To prosecute the power of a particular unelected owner.
One that is quite prepared to attack other parts of the media when they report embarrassing matters for that government – in order to defend that government from negativity that would detract from their political appeal.
Prepared to sacrifice the societal role of newsmedia for protection of that Limited News Party – with willing participants to that process in other parts of the media, happy to be able to push their opinions as news.
A franchise of the one that did what they did in the UK to their media, political and policing system.
Of course it wouldn’t have happened if Labor hadn’t been in lockstep with the Government