by Gordon RamsayRecent reports in a number of national newspapers that the supporters of the PressBoF Charter have offered a significant concession by removing an industry veto on appointments to the Board of a new self-regulator raise two problems.The first, that initially appears more important, is that the veto simply doesn’t exist in the PressBoF Charter. Instead, it is – we are told – in the Articles of Association (never made public), and so we remain unsure whether the move from ‘qualified-majority voting’ to ‘consensus’ decision-making will in practice ensure that a co-ordinated bloc could not dominate the process.The second problem renders the first almost completely irrelevant. The concession of the ‘veto’ is an acknowledgement that a perceived lack of independence from the industry is a shortcoming of the PressBoF Charter. However, the structure of this Royal Charter is such that industry dominance – specifically the dominance of PressBoF and its rebranded replacement, the Industry Funding Body (IFB) – is so great that a slight adjustment of the appointments process to one component of the system barely registers. The lack of the veto makes no difference when industry control of the new system is achieved by other means.Before addressing these, however, it is worth looking more closely at PressBoF itself. PressBoF currently raises the levy on members of the PCC in order to fund the self-regulatory body. It does this through liaising with the various industry representation bodies, whose representatives make up the Board alongside delegates from those newspaper groups who launched the PressBoF Charter.These industry bodies are: the Newspaper Publishers Association (NPA) (from where PressBoF’s Chair, Lord Guy Black of the Telegraph Media Group, is drawn) and the Newspaper Society (NS), which represents local and regional papers, alongside the Scottish Newspaper Society (SNS) and the PPA (representing magazines). PressBoF also shares a director, David Newell, with both the NPA and the NS (according to information on Companies House). The NPA has no web presence beyond this rudimentary site, and PressBoF and Scottish Newspaper Society (SNS) appear to have no independent web presence whatsoever. The industry bodies have been instrumental in leading industry negotiations on press reform, post-Leveson. David Newell has been particularly vocal recently in lobbying on the virtues of the PressBoF Charter.However, the Charter proposed by PressBoF specifies (Schedule 4, Para 2(j)) that PressBoF itself will be replaced by the IFB, which will be “the body established by the newspaper and magazine industry to collect and provide funding for the independent self-regulation of the press”.In lieu of any more information, it would appear that the IFB will be constituted as set out in Lord Black’s First (Para 15) and Fourth (Paras 20 & 21) Witness Statements to the Leveson Inquiry, that the previous structure will largely continue.In his report, Lord Justice Leveson singled out PressBoF as a key component of the PCC’s ‘profound lack of any fundamental or meaningful independence from the industry’, by exerting actual and de factobudgetary control over the regulator and participating in key appointments processes (Volume IV, Part J, pp1520-1522). Elsewhere, he claimed that he saw “no need for such a body to exist at all” (Volume IV, Part K, pp1761-1762).So, taking at face value the concession of the veto offered by the industry, how much control over the regulatory system does PressBoF exert in its own Charter?
So, far from being a noble concession to opponents and an attempt to reopen negotiations on a cross-party Charter that is backed by public opinion and the will of Parliament, the loss of a veto (if it ever existed) on appointments to the Board of the self-regulator appears somewhat insignificant in the face of the proposed influence of the industry throughout the structure of the PressBoF charter.Gordon Ramsay is Research Fellow at the Media Standards Trust. He tweets at @g_n_ramsay.This article was cross-posted from the LSE Media Policy Project blog.
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