As social media has become more and more central to public debate, replacing an ever more fragmented mainstream media, its profound flaws are playing a greater role in warping and undermining that debate.
As a former spruiker of the benefits of social media, of its ability to connect people up, enabling them to avoid points of control run by gatekeepers like government and corporations, I’m either well-placed, or the last person with any right — take your pick — to suggest social media is ruining society. But it’s hard to avoid the sense it has acted to polarise debate, to remove a shared frame of reference of common facts and values (values like, say, Nazis are bad), to act as a centrifugal force on positions, not a centripetal force.
But even if none of that were true, if that were all just the get-off-my-lawn ramblings of a middle-aged male, what is clear is that social media is the worst place to actually have any meaningful debate because too many people have entrenched positions and no one changes their mind. And too many people view issues entirely through a partisan prism — either for their political side, or whichever “side” they happen to be on on an issue. Many people who probably shake their heads at how climate denialists and Trump fans simply ignore — or reject as evidence of a conspiracy — evidence that doesn’t fit their world view are guilty of something similar themselves.
Take the reaction of many progressives on Twitter to the reporting of allegations about the workplace behaviour of Western Sydney Labor MP Emma Husar.
There are certainly some questions about the way some lurid and, according to the parties involved, fabricated allegations were reported by BuzzFeed, but other than that the reporting by both that outlet and others was entirely appropriate. And the allegations remain merely allegations at this point — partly because there’s no independent mechanism to test them, so Husar may indeed be, as she claims, the victim of factional warfare. But, whether the allegations about Husar are true or false, the workplace behaviour of the minority of MPs on all sides who treat their staff poorly rarely comes to light.
Sometimes it only emerges because the internal enemies of the MP concerned want to undermine them. And it can be extraordinarily difficult for staff and former staff to come forward and reveal the behaviour they were subjected to, especially if they want any sort of future in the political party involved.
[MPs’ offices remain potentially toxic workplaces]
But all of that nuance was rejected by many on Twitter who savaged BuzzFeed’s Alice Workman for her journalism, with accusations it was some anti-Labor campaign. If you went back in the Twitter timelines of many such people, you would almost certainly find them gleefully retweeting and endorsing Workman’s work on the scandal around Michaelia Cash’s office’s role in tipping off the media about union raids. Workman had gone from hero to enemy because she had applied the same journalistic skills to a Labor figure.
Others argued it was all a media stitch-up of Husar because the media had deliberately hidden news of Barnaby Joyce’s affair and baby. The media reported allegations against Husar, the media didn’t report Joyce’s affair, the media is biased. QED.
In fact, there is no comparison between the two cases. Joyce has long since forfeited any right to privacy since the affair was revealed — the man who sells his story and keeps on flogging it far past the point where everyone else would prefer they shut up forgoes any subsequent right to demand his privacy — but there was no evidence of any misuse of public resources by Joyce or his colleagues, and there is still no demonstrated case that his affair should have been reported on the basis of public interest. There is, separately, an allegation of sexual harassment against him — the specific issue on which he resigned — which remains (curiously) unresolved by the National Party, but that wasn’t known when his affair was revealed.
The allegations against Husar relate directly to her taxpayer-funded staff and the use of taxpayer resources. False or not, there is a public interest in their reporting. But for many progressives on social media, it’s all a conspiracy against Labor. Or, as the reactionaries they mock call it, “fake news”.
With all due respect, the Joyce matter was newsworthy simply based on his public projection of family values as an excuse for his stand against SSM and other progressive societal changes. Add to this, the well reported campaign his office ran in smearing Windsor as an adulterer and Joyce is even more deserving of scrutiny of his personal life. It would appear that in terms of MP expenses…the rules are, by design, so obviously opaque that his “clearance” of misuse might satisfy but I’m buggered if they satisfy me.
To Husar…it is possible that she is both guilty of being a terrible boss and being subjected to victimisation by elements of the ALP. Since her original defense was not that she “didn’t do it” but rather that “this was the first time she’d heard about the complaints”, I suspect that there is truth in the allegations about her treatment of staff but the addition of the smutty stuff was, even if true, unnecessary.
Your suggestion that the Husar issue is newsworthy in undoubtedly true, but your take on the Joyce issue is quite frankly laughable.
Agree.
“And the allegations remain merely allegations at this point”
That’s basically the problem.
Husar has been hounded to the point of falling on her sword while the allegations are merely allegations. Maybe she’s a monster and maybe she isn’t, I don’t know, but it’s a textbook trial by media.
Buzzfeed running the lurid sexual allegations which seem to have no credibility at all, cratering Alice Workman’s reputation in the process, is particularly bad. Sanctimonious about Leyonhjelm’s slut-shaming one minute, running sexual smears themselves the next.
Keane, the media is biased against Labor, this is not a conspiracy, it’s just proven over and over again by the double standards. Stuart Robert is still in Parliament while Dastyari was hounded out. Husar is hounded out on unproven allegations, no investigation into Joyce’s activities until facts are on the public record.
“there was no evidence of any misuse of public resources by Joyce or his colleagues” – ARE YOU KIDDING ME? At the very least Joyce broke the code of conduct and found taxpayer funded jobs for his mistress after moving her out of his own office (after breaking all the workplace ethics in the world by having a sexual relationship with an underling). Whatever you think of the Husar case, going back and trying to whitewash Joyce is crap, complete crap.
Joyce also has a laundry list of dodginess going back years that the press gallery continually glossed over in the name of calling him a great retail politician (is that meant to be code for buying votes by moving a government agency to his own electorate without a good reason? Just because you forget that so easily doesn’t mean the rest of us do).
Politics in this country won’t improve until the media accepts they have continually stuffed up and need to fix their own reporting. Crikey, God help us, is one of the best sources in the country – and you still knee-jerk to defending the way the media covers politics (but at least you’re willing to kick News/Sky/Fox which is more than most will do).
Meanwhile the Great Barrier Reef fund story and every policy story in the world is playing second fiddle to the idea that Emma Husar is the biggest behind the scenes bully in politics, an idea I find pretty unlikely just from observing Malcolm Turnbull and Kevin Rudd.
Thanks Arky; excellently put; agree with every word.
So do I.
Thanks Arky. Spot on. AND who in the ALP is looking after Husar’s personal well-being at this time? I mean, REALLY looking after her? Factional politics NEVER thinks TWICE about this.
Take note and take care intending female politicians.
The investigation should have been handled by the appropriate workplace regulator. Never was going to happen, was it?
Between this and the story run today in Crikey regarding handling of sexual assault within the Greens (and for that matter the sexual harassment allegation against Barnaby Joyce in the Nationals), I’m really left wondering why these kinds of investigations are allowed to be run internally by political parties at all. If there’s a criminal investigation, it’s for the cops, not people who almost invariably either have an axe to grind or a motive for covering up the truth or both, and who all seem to leak like sieves regardless of political wing.
And I.
Yep, I’ll second that too. I don’t know anything but she seems quite genuine to me.
Excellent response Arky, thanks for saying what I’ve been thinking so clearly.
My thanks too Arky. There could well turn out to be couple of particularly narky people orchestrating this campaign against Husar. What happened to innocent until proven guilty?
Very well said, considered and rational, appears to me to be a hatchet job on Hussar, get down and dirty, salacious allegations?? Her children being trolled!! disgusting.
Very well said, Arky (at 12.54pm). I join those above in applauding your efforts!
Very well said. I agree totally with you. Even if every last accusation against Husar is true (I have my doubts about that), why is the media splattering it all over the front pages when there are so many other more important and more disturbing things going on?
“but there was no evidence of any misuse of public resources by Joyce or his colleagues”
On the contrary there was plenty of evidence but the (supposedly) Independent Parliamentary Expenses Authority seemed more than happy to accept the spurious excuses of Joyce and Campion about their expenses. This of course is a pattern without supposedly independent statutory government bodies when it comes to shady actions by Coalition MP’s. Who can forget how the AFP decided not to press any charges against Mal Brough for facilitating the theft of Peter Slipper’s commonwealth diary?
This is why a strong and truly independent Federal ICAC is needed immediately.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-07-12/barnaby-joyce-vikki-campion-travel-cleared-by-audit/9986024
No. Lets not have a federal ICAC now. Wait a little longer until this cesspool of a government is removed otherwise if they set it up, we’ll simply get an ICAC that investigates the ALP, Greens and independents—in fact, everybody except the L/NP.
Let’s just hit this quote separately:
:”Workman had gone from hero to enemy because she had applied the same journalistic skills to a Labor figure”
No, Workman applied journalism to investigate a serious issue with Cash’s office and potentially Cash herself using the cops to go after political enemies.
She applied New Idea-level ethics to air lurid sexual allegations about Emma Husar which are quite possibly made up.
I’m pretty sure you can see the difference.
I’m also pretty sure that, like every other journo, you’re going to ignore all rebuttals to your work and any suggestion you ever got anything wrong. Sad.
Aced it again Arky. Lost all respect for Workman over this. The defensive look on her face when she was trying to justify this on the Drum showed she knew she’d crossed the line. We all make mistakes, she’s young so hopefully she’ll learn and be a better journo.
I said to someone yesterday that while Workman has blotted her copybook in my eyes, this is one mistake, not being blacklisted forever – she’s not even Mark Kenny let alone Chris Kenny. Some people are going over the top on that, sure. I can understand fellow journos wanting to cover for her a bit because I’m sure the Twitterverse hate is out of proportion, but the Twitterverse everything is out of proportion.
But nonetheless, a blot. Some journos are running the “it’s our job to run facts, not cover them up” kind of line for her, but of course if I rang up Crikey’s tip line and made an anonymous allegation that I saw Malcolm Turnbull receiving a million dollars in cash from a mafia kingpin and a blowjob under the table from two hookers, I’m pretty sure they’re not going to run that. The key point is in the word “facts”. Got to use some judgment for what you run and when, lest you end up just airing smears to further someone’s agenda, and it very much appears to be what Alice did with the “basic instinct” claims.
As for the overall coverage, I stand by the point that this is an example of media having terrible priorities for what’s important. Just as we had to sit through 2 months of baseless leadership speculation instead of policy talk leading up to “Super Saturday” we’re now sitting through endless talk about Emma Husar instead of policy talk or the Great Barrier Reef issue. The degree of coverage of each is WAY out of whack whether the allegations against Ms Husar are true or not.
John Menadue has a good piece in “Pearls and Irritations” about the GBR swindle. Have to get around and about to try and mitigate the msm pap.
Very well said
You are on a roll 5*!!
Who’d she think she was…Bronwyn Bishop?