One of the recurring themes of this blog since it began just over 18
months ago has been the issue of press freedom in Carmarthenshire, and
the county council's obsession with news management and public
relations. There have been instances of bullying and intimidation of the
press by other Welsh local authorities, such as Cardiff City Council in
the past, but they are the exceptions rather than the rule.
Carmarthenshire remains in a league of its own, and a picture is beginning to
emerge of systematic and wholesale interference by the local authority
in the running of our newspapers. Information has now come to light from several reliable sources who have witnessed the extent of the council's control at very close quarters.
A couple of days ago this blog reported on the council's latest attempts to bring one small local newspaper, the South Wales Guardian, into line by withholding advertising. There have been at least two such attacks on that newspaper this year.
A
much bigger target has been the titles published by Northcliffe Media,
until recently a division of the Daily Mail and General Trust. The
newspapers include the Carmarthen Journal, Llanelli Star and South Wales Evening Post, and together they account for the bulk of local press readership in Carmarthenshire.
This process began more than ten years ago when the new regime, as it was then, formed
the view that the local press was "anti-council" and that something
needed to be done about it. Soon departmental meetings were being told
that some of the troublemakers had been "sorted".
The
next step came with the launch of the council's own newspaper, the
"Community News" (forerunner of today's bloated "Carmarthenshire News").
For the first couple of years the Carmarthen Journal naively
agreed to distribute copies tucked inside its own newspaper, but the
council newspaper was steadily beefed up and the arrangement ended as it
became clear that the council was bent on producing an alternative to
independent local newspapers. As the finances of the local press
deteriorated, the council newspaper began draining advertising revenue
away from local newspapers, although despite repeated freedom of
information requests, the true extent of the council's spend on its
newspaper remains shrouded in secrecy.
In what now looks like the last golden age of the Carmarthen Journal, the paper came under the editorship of Robert Lloyd (April
2006 to October 2008). The newspaper has been through five editors in
just ten years. Robert Lloyd did what most local
newspapers had always done, and reported on the activities of the
council, warts and all. The newspaper gave a voice to local readers, and
sometimes the paper ran opinion pieces which were critical of aspects
of what the council was doing.
Unfortunately, the rise
in the council's ambitions was matched by the decline in the fortunes of
the local press, and Robert Lloyd and successive editors have found
themselves under pressure to cut costs and protect revenue while coming
under attack from the council. The council discovered that a much more
effective approach was to bypass editors and go straight to the
proprietors who were much more concerned about their bottom line than
airy-fairy notions of press freedom.
Certainly the
council took its "concerns" to Northcliffe Media towards the end of
2009, and it may well have done so on earlier occasions. Before it did
that, the council fired another shot across the bows of the press when
it unveiled plans for "Carmarthen TV", which was intended to be the next
phase in the creation of a multi-media propaganda platform. The
channel, which still lingers in a dark and dusty corner of the internet,
carried interviews with the chief executive and other council bigwigs,
along with films promoting council schemes. Carmarthen TV turned out to
be a complete flop, but it may have had its uses in driving home to newspaper executives the seriousness of the council's
intentions.
Possibly to the surprise of the council,
the showdown with Northcliffe was successful, and the formula of
docility = advertising revenue was established. The bullies had got away
with it. What followed was an uneasy year and a half of generally good
behaviour by the paper and its sister publications, with occasional
lapses.
The crunch came in mid-2011 with the arrest of
blogger Jacqui Thompson for trying to film part of a council meeting on
her mobile phone. The story and its immediate aftermath was reported by
the Carmarthen Journal in depth, and for a couple of weeks it seemed that the newspaper had rediscovered its former voice.
What
happened next is something we can only speculate about, but clearly
there was another dramatic intervention, and the newspaper found itself
put into "special measures". If Northcliffe wanted any more advertising
from the council, the Carmarthen Journal would have to submit
itself to the sort of interference and control normally associated with
military juntas, Soviet "people's democracies" and dictatorships.
Since advertising revenue from the council was roughly the same as the paper's entire wages bill, the Journal, which
has weathered more than 200 years, faced a stark choice between going
down with its journalistic integrity intact and all hands on board, or
bending its knee to the council.
From that point on, it was made clear to the Journal's reporters
that any copy which contained criticism of the council would not be
published. Reporters often found their copy extensively re-written to
make it acceptable to County Hall. From time to time the council also
seems to have submitted its own copy for publication, such as the
re-hash of the 6 month-old CSSIW report on residential care which
coincided with the BBC's documentary on the Delyth Jenkins case.
Mrs Jenkins has pointed out that she was contacted by a reporter from the Journal
at the time, and provided him with documents relating to her case.
Needless to say, the resulting story did not get past the red pencils.
Reporters from the Journal who
were used to dealing with local authority press offices elsewhere were
in for a rude awakening when they had to speak to County Hall. There was
an atmosphere of menace, obstructiveness, intimidation, and vindictiveness towards people
who for whatever reason had upset the council.
Reporters were told by the council's Ministry of Truth not to follow up
certain leads, and questioned closely why they wanted this or that piece
of information.
One reporter who had submitted a
freedom of information request relating to the pay of senior officers
was called in to be told that one of the senior officers subject to the
request had called the editor in person and "suggested" that the request
be withdrawn. It was, for fear of the consequences.
The editor probably thought that
the letters page was safe from council interference, and a letter from
Mrs Lesley Williams was published in February of this year complaining
about the use of public money to fund the chief executive's libel
indemnity.
One of the then senior councillors wrote in
the following week. He ignored the issue of the libel indemnity and
attacked Mrs Williams for her role in a planning dispute years earlier about the St
Catherine's Walk shopping precinct. Readers were genuinely outraged, but
there followed a letter from the chief executive himself, again
attacking Mrs Williams, and the correspondence was closed by order,
leaving the last word with the chief executive.
Shortly
afterwards, various other stories were spiked by order on the grounds
that they were "political" and therefore not suitable for publication in
the run-up to the council elections in May.
Whether
this regime is still in place after the recent change of ownership at
Northcliffe is not clear, but the double-page spread "interview" with
the chief executive a couple of weeks ago suggests that so far nothing
has changed.
While the Leveson report has thrown the
spotlight on victimisation of people by the tabloid press, we should
also spare a few minutes to ask what protection is given to the press
and other news media when over-mighty arms of government or business
tycoons decide to gun for them. We can sympathise with the aims of
Hacked Off, but we also need to remember that the press and media
organisations can be victims too. Just think of Sir James Goldsmith and
Private Eye; Tony Blair, Alastair Campbell and the BBC as well as our own local bullies.
9 comments:
These are very serious allegations. One accepts that the regional press is foremost a commercial operation but the wilful suppression of information in the manner described here is alarming. Such instances flag up the key difference between the freedom of the press which has been greatly discussed of late and the independence of the media which is apparently under threat in Carmarthenshire.
Maybe they were yelled at to 'back off a bit!'
An excellent - if spine-chilling - account of the influence being exerted over a venerable and honourable local press. I can testify to the fact that I have been refused the right of reply to several personal attacks on me and unfortunately, the neutering of the press is leading to a decline in circulation as many people don't bother to buy local papers any more because they no longer report any contentious issues.
Anna, many thanks for the interesting comment. Bearing in mind Carmarthenshire's near-win in last year's Private Eye Legal Bully of the Year Awards, I think we'd better keep that one to ourselves.
Cneifiwr - fair point! Wouldn't want to get you distracted with legal cases!
I am sure there are many people in Llanelli that could give you more details on that one if you want them.
Good article. Is there a case for an alternative community newspaper that would reach beyond the blogosphere and tell the truth about this awful council?
The ombudsman has just arrived in County Hall to question the Press Office about the Sainsbury's debacle.Would love to be a fly on the wall
8 months on and I still haven't had my paperwork returned from the Journal office.
Perhaps the Ombudsman has several things on the agenda. He might want to know why he seems to be so regularly undermined by the Council.
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