PRESS RELEASE: Press abuse victims welcome first ever independent self-regulator; call on Government to deliver promised free speech protections

25/10/2016

Reacting to the decision of the independent Press Recognition Panel, which was established under the

Leveson Royal Charter, to approve the press regulator IMPRESS as independent and effective, Hacked Off’s Joint Executive Director Dr. Evan Harris said:

“By passing the PRP’s audit, IMPRESS is the first regulator to have proven its independence and effectiveness under the Leveson system of independent assessment. The days of failed industry-controlled regulators like the PCC and its sham replacement IPSO are numbered. IPSO members’ desperate attempts to derail the Leveson process with further delays and aggressive threats of legal action against the PRP, have failed yet again today."This decision makes IMPRESS the only regulator which the public, readers and victims of press abuse can trust to regulate newspapers and safeguard freedom of the press, while offering redress when they get things wrong."The public will be pleased that independent and effective press regulation, which opinion polls have shown the public support overwhelmingly, is achievable but will expect that newspapers join IMPRESS or get their own regulator recognised.“Now there is a recognised regulator, the costs protections for news publishers signed up to it, and for those press victims forced to sue newspapers who are not signed up, which were set out in section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act should now be allowed to take effect. The Government’s refusal to bring that law into effect means that this Government is now actively depriving publishers and journalists of the free speech protections they were promised."

Hacked Off Patron and libel-victim Christopher Jefferies said:

"National titles must now sign up to IMPRESS if they want to show the public that anything has changed since the phone hacking scandal and Leveson Report. The recognition of a regulator was supposed to trigger both costs protection for newspapers who are signed up and guaranteed access to justice for victims of press abuse who need to sue a newspaper which is not signed up. The Government must therefore bring that measure into effect as they promised."

Investigative journalist, Nick Davies said:

"No decent journalist wants their work regulated by Ipso - an organisation which is vulnerable to the influence of some very bad people from the worst newspapers in the UK. Impress is a decent alternative, independent of government and of newspapers."It tells you all you need to know about the continuing scandal of press misbehaviour in the UK that these notorious newspapers will not join a regulator which can be trusted to enforce the code of conduct which they themselves have written and claim to want to honour; and that in spite of overwhelming public and parliamentary support, government is too scared of those newspapers to trigger Section 40, which would put pressure on those newspapers to join such a regulator."

Notes

The full background on this decision is here.Hacked Off is the campaign for a free and accountable press. The Campaign works with victims of press abuse to achieve those aims.PRESS ENQUIRIES AND INTERVIEWS: press@hackinginquiry.org or call Nathan Sparkes on 07554 665 940

Download the full report:

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Queries: campaign@hackinginquiry.org

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