This article is part of a series about a legal threat sent to Crikey by Lachlan Murdoch, over an article Crikey published about the January 6 riots in the US. For the series introduction go here, and for the full series go here.
The case for curbing the power of News Corp in Australia can be told with a few simple facts. It controls around two-thirds of the nation’s newspapers. It is the nation’s dominant subscription television platform. It owns a quarter of the nation’s top 20 news sites. Other media outlets, especially the notionally independent ABC, readily follow its editorial lead each day. That alone justifies its break-up.
But worse, the nature of that dominant role in Australia’s already highly concentrated media environment is toxic. It openly supports one political party, by the admission of its most senior and experienced political commentator. It is “an absolute threat to our democracy”, according to former Liberal prime minister Malcolm Turnbull. He describes News Corp as the nation’s most powerful political actor, but one that acts with no accountability. Its climate denialism, Turnbull says, “is just staggering and has done enormous damage to the world”. Even James Murdoch has lamented “the ongoing [climate] denial among the news outlets in Australia given obvious evidence to the contrary”.
How then could policymakers — should they so wish — curb the malignant power of the Murdoch empire?
Traditionally, media regulation in relation to the abuse of media power in Australia has revolved around two ideas: ownership restrictions and some kind of suitability test for broadcasters.
Ownership limits have mostly been abolished now but in the past they’ve been used to prevent over-concentration of media: we’ve limited the reach of broadcasters, or the ownership of multiple forms of traditional media (TV, radio, newspapers); or had a “share of voice” test. Secondarily, there is also competition law, via which the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission might intervene in transactions that substantially lessen competition — although for the media that’s always been about competition in specific economic markets like advertising.
Alternatively, on the basis that broadcasting was recognised as delivering substantial influence, we used to have requirements that broadcasting licence holders satisfy tests such as being a fit and proper person to hold a licence, or to be “suitable”, as the current Broadcasting Services Act put its. The current suitability requirements, however, have been so heavily watered down as to be near-meaningless.
Both of these approaches could be revived to force the break-up of the Murdoch empire. While it’s technically more difficult to regulate newspapers than broadcasting licences, newspapers are already included in existing “minimum voice” rules via the Commonwealth’s power to regulate corporations. News Corp could be forced to reduce its ownership of tabloids to one or two cities, or dump its national newspaper, or hive off its subscription television licence.
In a straitened media environment, however, there’s a real question about whether those assets would be viable once they’ve been fragmented.
A strengthened suitability test could also be applied that would enable the broadcasting regulator to assess the impact of the Murdoch family on Australia and determine whether it was in Australia’s national interest that their company continue to be allowed to control a subscription television licence.
Both of these approaches are clunky and have proved unsatisfactory in practice. Fortunately, however, the Murdochs themselves have furnished us with another, better tool.
The News Media Bargaining Code, which was a News Corp creation handed to, and implemented by, then-treasurer Josh Frydenberg, threw out the window generations of media policy in Australia — even as it continued the great tradition of media proprietors dictating policy — in favour of a completely new approach. Once-fundamental distinctions between broadcasting, newspapers and online platforms were abandoned. The government simply gave itself the power to regulate news media business and digital platforms, creating a new category of legal entity “news sources”, which could be a newspaper, TV or radio broadcaster, website or video clip online, and digital platforms, which were simply designated as such by the government.
The rationale for this completely new approach to media regulation was, according to the explanatory memorandum for the legislation, that “government intervention is necessary because of the public benefit provided by the production and dissemination of news, and the importance of a strong independent media in a well-functioning democracy”.
Using that rationale, and the new categories of “news source” and “digital platform”, the government could simply order the break-up of a dominant or damaging news source — and both would apply to News Corp. The very tool created by the Murdochs could be easily used to curb their influence.
The real impediment is political, not legal or constitutional. After decades of being mauled by News Corp, Labor is too traumatised to be able to think clearly about either its own interests or the public interest when it comes to media regulation. It has accepted the dominant media company in Australia actively and constantly campaigning against it as a fact of life and is too scared to contemplate a different world. It won’t even tolerate the idea of an inquiry into our profoundly damaged media environment.
It’s yet another example of why major party politics as usual badly needs disrupting in Australia.
Labor needs to confront this head-on and LEGISLATE. What a negative, divisive, mendacious company News is, and its owners and ‘front’ people! Our very democracy is threatene and undermined by this organisation – and witness the destruction of the USA already by News in league with the Radical Right (Repubs). The LNP here has a huge amount to answer for as well, going back to Howard, but continuing, particularly witht the Abbott and Morrison crew. Fortunately the Aust public has seen more sense than the Americans and reduced the LNP to a temporarily powerless rabble. So now is the time to act
I’ve always been confused about whether News Corp is the propaganda department for the Coalition or is the Coalition simply the political wing of News Corp.
Maybe in such a long-standing symbiotic relationship it’s just too close to call which is the parasite and which is the host. Two parasites perhaps?
Don’t forget the IPA’s role as well.
Perhaps he was being charitable.
Excellent article, depressing conclusion. Another example of regulatory capture.
Labor is like a battered partner who, when given the perfect opportunity to testify against their abuser, recoils in fear that they somehow might make things worse … not understanding that their timidness will only encourage their abuser to more reckless and violent behaviour
An excellent analogy.
Bullies despise the weak, someone should tell Albanese. He & Michelle Rowland appear unaware.
The ABC better fit the role of the battered partner – constantly trying to find the magic words to stop News Ltd from beating them up, gaslit into believing that it’s their own fault for not… whatever the latest excuse for a beating is.
Labor pander to News Ltd because deep down they believe that if they just try hard enough to woo them, then the Murdochs will shift their allegiance from the Coalition.
It happened before – most recently in the UK for Tony Blair – but nuLabour was a Labor/Labour party in name only and failed to reverse Thatchers worst excesses or fix the FPTP idiocy.
My personal view is the two party system needs to be replaced with European style multi party coalitions and list based PR.
Our PV is only a slightly better FPTP. Not a bad as the UK but still bad.
Over the last 9 years we’ve seen ABC regional budgets butchered resulting in massively reduced targeted news services into the regions. Meanwhile Sky “News”, which was traditionally a subscription only service, is now beamed on free to air into the regions. There is something very wrong with media in this country.
The times when people have argued with me that we need more competition in regional news services where the ABC have apparently had a near monopoly, I always respond with the same question; could you trust Sky News to be a competent national emergency broadcaster during disasters like the 2019/20 bushfires or the Lismore/East Coast floods. I usually get very confused looks after that.
That “notionally independent ABC” – with it’s unctuous unquestioning nose to the Limited News editorial grindstone – in some sort of tawdry, arse-whipped, S&M master-servant relationship?
Again, the likes of The Drum, Q&A and Insiders do embarrassment-free PR promos for Limited News – no questions asked, no calling to account.
Just have to look at the cultivated ignorance surrounding the indulgence of a parade of Limited News touts breasting the very low ABC responsibility bar, that includes no questions about their biased campaign during any number of elections, including the last – nothing about the way Limited News habitually meddles by using their market share of the “information” industry and the way they wielded that, to influence enough voters to return their ‘Limited News Party’….. but watch them go to town on ‘partisan, biased, misinformative social media’ for doing much the same thing…..
I was going to suggest that “unctuous unquestioning nose to the Limited News editorial grindstone…” sounds like a case of dangerous & chronically impacted constipation but it would explain the bleeding, brown nose.
Yes they shouldn’t ever (as a fixed policy) give news corpse any of their air-space. Suffering I suppose from the evisceration of their investigative reporters and run by LNP stooges. Completely overdone the “balance”, and have far too many right wing journos on their programs.
ABC (International) running in the background, but any news etc. is wall to wall opposition spokespeople inc. Dutton and then Speers et al, citing each other…… and complaining about Labor i.e. not the govt.