How does one cover a politician to whom lying comes easily, or who incorporates it as an important part of their political business model?
It’s been a vexed issue for American journalists confronted by Donald Trump, who not merely lied routinely but who seemed to prefer lying even when it wasn’t necessary — totalling more than 30,000 lies by the end of his presidency, according to The Washington Post.
Part of the reaction to Trump in the US media was a proliferation of fact-checking, and a reduced willingness by journalists — even those engaged in straight reporting — to repeat his claims without alerting readers to their false or contested status.
Some journalists, like Jim Acosta, were prepared to aggressively dispute Trump’s claim. This carried the risk of being punished by the administration and criticised by other journalists — and not merely those in partisan media.
While Scott Morrison hasn’t reached the Trump level of lying simply as a matter of course, the frequency and blatant nature of his deceptions and untruths raises similar questions for the Australian media.
For much of his time as prime minister, the media did not perform well in challenging Morrison’s lies. This has improved in 2021, as more and more journalists — including some working for the Coalition-aligned News Corp — have been sceptical and even critical during media conferences, especially on gender issues.
It was Sky News’ Andrew Clennell who elicited a particularly blatant lie from Morrison when he pressured him on workplace standards within the government. Morrison responded by fabricating a claim about a harassment complaint within News Corp, a lie for which he had to apologise that night.
That incident demonstrated that Morrison is unusually thin-skinned for a senior politician. He reacts aggressively and without discipline when challenged, and doesn’t mind if he is seen as evading questions or talking over journalists. Nor does he mind lying, it seems, by way of attack.
Morrison has increasingly adopted the political tactic of avoiding media conferences when he knows he will face difficult issues. That means fewer journalists have a strong opportunity to engage in the kind of repeat questioning needed to deal with lying.
Moreover, apart from prime ministerial brain explosions, the standard press conference format is not usually conducive to challenging lies: it’s a contest between journalists to see who can get a question in and politicians can pick and choose what they answer and when they end it.
Only journalists conducting long-form interviews with Morrison are in a position to properly challenge his lies. But some struggle even to interrupt his exposition of talking points, letting him run on at length rather than pulling him up when he utters a falsehood. It’s significant that it’s an interviewer from outside the press gallery, A Current Affair’s Tracy Grimshaw, who has landed the most punishing blows on Morrison and his mishandling of gender issues.
Anything less now must be regarded as a journalistic failure — the media must not be party to Morrison’s deliberate strategy of misleading voters, and providing him with a credible platform.
Other journalists, editors and producers who don’t get the opportunity for extended interviews can do better too. While fact-checking units have become common, not all media companies have them or use them effectively. Too many journalists still see their job as relaying statements by politicians that they know to be false, without making any effort to ensure their readers and listeners aren’t misled.
And few mainstream outlets are prepared to regularly use the accurate term “lie” about Morrison, especially in headlines, no matter how blatant his untruths are.
Calling someone a liar comes with a risk of defamation, although reporting responsibly on serious matters of political discussion should be protected by the courts. For a declining media struggling with fewer resources, it’s easier to avoid litigation in Australia’s pro-plaintiff courts by resorting to more wishy-washy terms like “false” or “untrue”. Some media practitioners also cavil at “lie”, insisting that it suggests an element of intent that can’t be proven.
However, a politician who repeats a demonstrably false or widely debunked claim over and over as part of a political strategy that embraces deception as a core element should be called out. Especially a prime minister, who as national leader should be held to some standard of decent political conduct.
It’s not the role of journalists to attack and campaign against prime ministers. But it is their job to hold them to account, even if it’s uncomfortable, and to not be a party to misleading Australians.
” …a politician who repeats a demonstrably false or widely debunked claim over and over as part of a political strategy that embraces deception as a core element should be called out. Especially a prime minister, who as national leader should be held to some standard of decent political conduct…”
Hooray!!
Thank Bernard, but please lets have a close look at what has enabled this conduct.
There has always been an element of media that is more concerned with gaining attention by fabricating a story with enough grey area to make it seem feasible. It is the art of gaining a persons confidence by using fear, exclusivity/ being part of the group and emotive persuasion strategies.
It is or was the ethical standard of the editor and the owners of the outlet that stand between propaganda and logic/ reason.
It is this media environment that has been groomed and formed into a service for marketing rather than informing that has matured into something that is ready to manipulate and shape the publics’ opinion.
This approach to media /advertising/ marketing has permeated the fabric of our minds ability to deduce, to make decisions.
We could lay this squarely at the feet of those bodies that are responsible for media /advertising integrity, how they have overseen this Murdochian transformation of the message that media delivers is mind snappingly unconscionable, but this wasn’t a mistake ,this is a very deliberate operation that has been orchestrated by those that stand to gain financially or career wise.
Science,logic, reason, natural environment, the physical and psychological health of our people have all been at the mercy of this endeavour.
I left out one of the most important facilitators , repetition of the message , the relevance of having a prime minister with a marketing background shouldn’t be lost on anyone… thanks again Bernard.
That is exactly what the The Big Lie, die große Lüge entails.
SOP of theRepublicans and their enablers…as well as that of the LNP and their enablers here in Australia and the Tories in the UK
Die groove Lüge, the expression, coined byAdolf Hitler ,when he dictated Mein Kampf in 1925, about the use of a lie so “colossal” that no one would believe that someone “could have the impudence to distort thetruth so infamously”.
The phrase was also used in a report prepared during the war by the United States OSS in describing Hitler’s psychological profile.
“His primary rules were: never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong; never concede that there may be some good in your enemy; never leave room for alternatives; never accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time and blame him for everything that goes wrong; people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one; and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later believe it.”
The above quote appears in the report, A Psychological Analysis of Adolph Hitler: His Life and Legend, by Walter C. Langer,available atthe US National Archives.
A somewhat similar quote appears in Analysis of the Personality of Adolph Hitler: With Predictions of His Future Behaviour and Suggestions for Dealing with Him Now and After Germany’s Surrender, by Henry A. Murray, October 1943.
“Never to admit a fault or wrong; never to accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time; blame that enemy for everything that goes wrong; take advantage of every opportunity to raise a political whirlwind.”
grâce à wikipedia
Is not the above exactly how Trump. Johnson and Morrisonand theirenablers behave?
At the risk of invoking Godwin’s Law, re Morrison at least, the answer is affirmative. To a T.
Thank you, it has become quite difficult to compare anyone or organisation with Hitler, Edward Bernays was inspired by propaganda in the 1st world war,
. This may become a key issue in trying to explain how we have become blase with politicians and how to reform democracy.
We aren’t able to refer easily to one of the most successful perpetrators of the strategy which gives it an advantage. The last paragraph is so familiar.
Adam Curtis ‘Century of the Self’ drawing upon Bernay’s et al. for media manipulation on political issues…. apparent since Thatcher, Reagan and the emergence of NewsCorp:
‘Where once the political process was about engaging people’s rational, conscious minds, as well as facilitating their needs as a group, Stuart Ewen, a historian of public relations, argues that politicians now appeal to primitive impulses that have little bearing on issues outside the narrow self-interests of a consumer society.’ And whatever it takes to retain power….
It’s an important documentary
You wouldn’t be referring to the lie concocted by our former prime minister and his chief of staff (remembering of course that Ms credible admitted doing so) that they then repeated ad nauseum with the complicit support of the media?
I don’t know where the media has gone. apart from Crikey and New Daily, the SMH has gone to the dark side. I saw the signs a couple of years ago with Hartcher cheering on the anti-China team; at least the Letters are the only place normal people can raise a voice in the printed paper. I live in a north shore suburb and it’s almost impossible to find any critical thought – the people are welded on to the local LNP poles, as it wouldn’t matter what they do – they vote that way for life – probably born to it and just keep it up!
Among the mainstream media only the old Fairfax mob show any spine wit occasional outbursts from the project. Let’s face it the Fox/Oz/Tele/Hun/Sky cartel ar another arm of Scotty’s marketing most of the time. I grew up as a Liberal, leaned Labor at uni for a while, voted for Fraser, then Hawke got fed up with Keating’s hubris and bad mouthing, but Howard stole the party and my country with his not entirely tacit racism and divisiveness. It will be -200 in hell before I vote LNP again. I am a small l liberal with slightly socialist tendencies (I think). Where are the men of stature in either side? The ones with dignity? There seem to be a few women on the ALP side. Brown in the Senate had it. But where are the ones with intelligence and with? ON the LNP, where are the ones with a plan? The media accepts that politicians lie up to 100% of the time and it seems so do we. The latest stuff on Sky about the shooting of a British female BLM activist is sickening, but they did nothing. The Communications minister is MIA of course.
“Some media practitioners also cavil at “lie”, insisting that it suggests an element of intent that can’t be proven.”
This idea seems to arise from the false belief that everything must be judged by principles used in criminal jurisprudence: a verdict of guilty requires proof beyond reasonable doubt of both a criminal act and a criminal intent.
The government has been running hard with the pretence this applies to everything because it sets a near impossible barrier to any adverse finding on anything the government or a minister says or allegedly does. But these principles are only applicable to an accusation of a specific crime being judged by a court. In any other circumstances, such as when it appears a minister has lied, it ought to be reported as a probable lie if any reasonable person on the facts would conclude the most likely explanation is the minister lied. Even if it is just one of several credible explanations it is reasonable to point it out, and if relevant, demonstrate it is part of a wider pattern – as Crikey‘s dossier on Morrison’s lies shows a consistent pattern over years and years.
Journalists who simply report “he said – she said” say and leave the public to decide what to make of it are collaborating in the politicians’ dirty work, even before we get to News Corp and its propaganda.
It is also relevant to point out that the media has to deal with a cavalcade of LNP liars: Dodgy Angus, Alex Hawke, Christian Railway Porter, Bridget McKenzie, Freedom Boy Tim Wilson, Paul Fletcher etc etc. At least they make holding them to account slightly easier by being utterly incompetent. But the majority of the media neither reports incompetence nor dishonesty. And the ABC is cowered into faux ‘balance’ to retain some funding.