Australia’s once-vibrant journalistic culture would be dramatically different.
THE OVERWHELMING CASE FOR PLURALITY www.guardian.co.uk
Sunday 24 June 2012 18.00 BST
Alan Rusbridger
Z ess than a year ago, the L country came within days,
The press argues it exists to be a check on power – but there must be a legal check on who controls the press. Photograph: Andy Myatt/Alamy
News of the World hacking the phones of a dead teenager, 7/7 victims, and the relatives of murdered children, eventually decided unanimously to call on News Corp to abandon the bid. The company did so. But the legal position remains the same today. In theory, there would be nothing to prevent Rupert Murdoch from launching a future bid for BSkyB once
the furore over phonehacking has died down. The Leveson inquiry has, understandably, focused on how to regulate press content, complaints and standards. All important stuff. But part of Lord Justice Leveson’s brief is also to think about plurality – how you stop media power being concentrated in a few hands. It’s a complex subject, as Ofcom’s latest review makes plain. But it is every bit as important as the
possibly hours, of allowing the largest and most dominant news company the UK has ever seen to in effect double in size. There was apparently nothing in law that enabled anyone to stop the News Corporation bid for the full ownership of BSkyB on grounds of plurality. At the eleventh hour, parliament, stirred by revulsion about the remodelling of selfregulation, if not more so, and now the judge has barely six weeks left in which to consider the issue. To state the obvious: plurality is not just about Murdoch, nor is it simply about size. A vivid lesson in why choice matters is playing out in Australia, with a threat to the independence of the country’s main alternative to the huge