Britain has been transfixed by the phone hacking scandal that has shaken its media world. But will it really change the nation’s press?
Much depends on the shelf life of the outcry over alleged skullduggery by journalists working for British papers owned by Rupert Murdoch, who closed a newspaper, dropped a major business deal and agreed to testify before Parliament in an attempt to defuse the uproar.
An inquiry authorised by Prime Minister David Cameron and a criminal investigation aim to clear up this particular mess, but reforming the media and untangling corrosive ties between politics and the press, what some call an embedded cultural defect, require the public’s attention in the long term.
Without grassroots pressure, Britain’s press will have less incentive to change.
But there’s a fundamental dilemma: Even as Britons recoil at trashy tabloid tactics, they have bought such papers by the millions — hungry for juicy gossip obtained by the very illegal means they decry.
Murdoch’s now-shuttered News of the World was Britain’s second best-selling paper, just behind its sister tabloid, the Sun.
“The public’s interest in these matters is fickle to say the least,” said Steven Fielding, professor of political history at the University of Nottingham. “Murdoch is probably thinking, ‘Well, if I can last for about six months, then everything will return back to normal.'”
An opportunity for change
Fielding said Britons were more concerned about the economy, jobs, services and quality of life, especially at a time when the government is implementing painful austerity measures aimed at getting the country’s finances in order.
Martin Moore, a founder of Hacked Off, a group that seeks full accountability in the phone-hacking allegations, said he was concerned that a “summer hiatus” could cool tempers and chip away at momentum for reform.
“This is a moment and an opportunity to change things,” he said.
In a speech on Thursday, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said Britain should look beyond the scandal and implement changes that will guarantee freedom of the press, which he described as the “lifeblood” of democracy, but also ensure accountability through robust corporate governance, and a solid framework that fosters diversity of ownership of media organisations.
“I know that there is real fear among reformers that this opportunity will pass us by. That there will be plenty of heat, but no light,” Clegg said. “The pessimists have a point. In recent decades the political class has consistently failed to stand up to the media. Seeking to curry favour with powerful media barons or prevent their own personal lives from being splashed across the front pages.”
‘Engines of propaganda’
Indeed, success and failure in British politics has long depended heavily on the blessing of the national press, which is, to put it diplomatically, unkind to those it does not respect. The media delivers judgments with icy, devastating eloquence or, in the case of some tabloids, piles on like bulky athletes in a rugby scrum.
The intimacy and sparring between British politicians and the press go back generations. Stanley Baldwin, then leader of the opposition Conservatives in 1931, was the target of a campaign for his ouster by Lord Beaverbrook, owner of the Daily Express, and Lord Rothermere, owner of the Daily Mail. He blasted their newspapers in a speech.
“They are engines of propaganda for the constantly changing policies, desires, personal wishes, personal likes and personal dislikes of two men,” declared Baldwin, who also served as prime minister. He said the press barons sought “power without responsibility, the prerogative of the harlot throughout the ages”.
The criticism did not induce Beaverbrook and Rothermere to temper their ways, though the latter later bet on the wrong horse with his enthusiastic support for Oswald Mosley, leader of the British Union of Fascists.
Murdoch, on the other hand, has been forced to make concessions, abandoning his bid to take full control of British Sky Broadcasting, a major satellite television operation.
‘An over-egged crisis’
On Friday, Rebekah Brooks quit as chief executive of his embattled British newspapers even though he had previously refused to accept her resignation. The publisher of the Wall Street Journal, who had been chairperson of the company’s British newspaper arm during some of the alleged transgressions and had worked for News Corporation for more than five decades, quickly followed suit.
But these headline-grabbing developments mask broader questions about how to balance media freedom with accountability, whether new regulations should be introduced or enforcement of existing laws on corruption and other crimes is sufficient, and to what extent the politicians who now call for an overhaul of the way the media and politics intersect acted as promoters for suspect practices.
Cameron, of the Conservatives, is on the defensive because he had hired Andy Coulson, former editor of the News of the World, as his communications director despite the misgivings of Clegg’s Liberal Democrats, the junior partner in his coalition. Coulson, who was arrested last week, resigned in January as the hacking allegations grew.
Jeremy Black, a professor of history at the University of Exeter, said the scandal was a welcome distraction for political parties that are struggling for answers to economic challenges at home and across Europe, and that broader concerns about a “coarsening of public life” and the salacious nature of large segments of British media coverage are not being addressed.
He cited some of the reporting on Madeleine McCann, a British girl whose disappearance in Portugal in 2007 drew global attention. Her father, Gerry McCann, complained of sensational journalism in the case, and the parents won libel damages from some British newspapers over suggestions that they were responsible for their daughter’s death.
“This is an over-egged crisis,” Black said of the phone hacking affair. “It provides a wonderful opportunity for people, as it were, to express their accumulated grievances.” — Sapa-AP