Kate Middleton has breasts. Prince
Harry sometimes takes his clothes off in private. Oh, those royals!
How fortunate we are that we have a free press which, though it
(mostly) has the decency not to show us those intrusive pictures,
will tell us about them so we can be sure power is not abused. At
least not by naked people.
Today, accidental pornographer and
erstwhile drummer boy Richard Desmond, who has pounded the percussion
for free speech everywhere but the libel courts, has declared himself
so disgusted by The Irish Daily Star's publication of pictures of the
topless princess that he's considering closing it down. One might
suggest that it would be more proportionate for him to sack the
editor on duty - or even to reconsider his own policy of encouraging
staff to push boundaries in order to make sales - but perhaps in
these post-News of the World days he thinks it'll look positively
heroic to make a hundred people redundant. After all, whilst a lot of
people read tabloids, everybody hates, them, don't they? From phone
hacking to the Hillsborough revelations, they've hardly been making
friends this year.
In ancient times the story went that
there was a demon called Asmodeus, and this particular demon's hobby
was lifting up the roofs of people's houses to peer at what was going
on within. Whilst everybody agreed that it was important the public
sphere be monitored and politicians held to account, the idea of
intruding into the private lives of citizens was considered outright
evil. It's important to bear in mind, of course, that not everybody
was a citizen. That attitude still lingers in the present day. As
long as the more prurient sections of the press are careful to
restrict their focus to already stigmatised groups - criminals,
benefit claimants, Muslims, transgender people - they can get away
with a great deal. It's only when they trouble the powerful that they
find themselves at risk - which illustrates both the reason why we
need them to be troubling and the fact that they're passing off as
trouble what is merely smut.
As Chair of Trans Media Watch, I spend
a good part of my time standing up for ordinary people whose lives
are sensationalised in the press. By and large, those members of the
wider public who are educated about transgender issues are supportive
of this. I get rather less support when I raise my voice in defence
of the privacy of the royal family. They have no right to privacy,
people tell me, because they're public figures. But what does this
mean? That their very flesh is public? That, by virtue of their
special status, they should not be treated as human? Whilst I cannot
help but note that making royals afraid to undress in private might
at least decrease the chances of the situation continuing, I don't
think any amount of wealth could justify them being, in effect,
treated as mere objects. Besides, when we buy into attacks made
against them as private individuals we are doing the very opposite of
holding them to account. We are allowing ourselves to be distracted
from the real questions that need to be asked about the power they
wield. It is notable that the recent story about Prince Charles being
consulted on a wide range of government policies, and asked to
approve them before they became law, received substantially less
coverage. One pair of breasts is much like another but to fiddle with
soft porn whilst our democracy burns takes a special kind of tit.
It takes, in fact, the kind of person
who has no interest in journalism at all but sees owning newspapers
merely as a route to personal wealth and power; just the kind of
person to whom sacking a hundred journalists means nothing. When
people like this are making the big decisions at our major newspapers
we need to ask ourselves not why journalists are letting us down but,
rather, why journalists are not being heard at all. When we talk
about press ethics we need to remember that most journalists - as
reflected by the NUJ - have sincere concerns about ethical practice.
At certain papers, however, it is only the unethical few who can
climb to the top - or stay in a job at all. And when it comes to
public redress, the Press Complaints Commission often finds itself
hamstrung by a code of practice controlled by a small group of
editors whose influence on the industry should be every bit as
suspect as that of the politicians everyone fears may take control.
There are other options, of course. My
charity has made a series of recommendations to the Leveson Inquiry,
as have others, and it is shortly due to report. It's possible that
the recent right royal scandals represent a jockeying for position
before this happens. We already saw something of that cynicism when
transgender exposés
briefly disappeared from the papers during the submission period for
the inquiry, only to reappear afterwards, as we were invited to
document in a second submission later on. Our position is certainly
not that control of the press should be given to the government, as
any sensible person can see the risks this entails - rather, we would
support the establishment of a truly independent body. The problem
that I perceive is that a body controlled by a handful of men isn't
so very far from a government-controlled organ anyway - it may be
that the power base is divided but it is still very much in the hands
of the establishment. It lacks the inherent vitality and diversity
that journalism needs in order to thrive - in order to do its job.
What
is that job? Sometimes it does involve peering into the private
domain. There will inevitably be some cases where this is genuinely
in the public interest - a little poison, as they say, to cure the
greater ill. But we must not assume that because something is
prurient it is also, in any meaningful sense, revealing. I suspect
most of us - David Icke and friends aside - had a pretty good idea
what Prince Harry would look like naked before we were offered the
option of seeing it.
We've
seen a lot of weak apologies this week. Kelvin MacKenzie saying that
he regrets calling Liverpool football fans thieves responsible for
their own suffering, but doing nothing to explain why he was so ready
to believe it, even whilst he blames others for misinforming him.
Richard Desmond thinking that by getting rid of assorted staff
members, most of whom will have had nothing to do with the boobs
boob, he can enjoy the publicity those pictures have brought to his
papers whilst dodging the fallout. I'm not going to add to that -
I'll say, straight out, that I wouldn't cry for any of his papers if
they were closed tomorrow. That said, my feelings about their staff
are another matter. Likewise my feelings about the newspaper
industry, which depends on its plurality and is already suffering
because so much of that is meaningless. I'm dubious about the idea of
restricting ownership because there are practical issues there around
how broadsheets can be kept afloat, but there's plenty of room for
change in the nitty gritty of how papers are managed and run. Let's
stop pretending our press is free in its current form, and start
fighting for it.
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