(First published in The Dominion Post, September 8.)
What a civilised election campaign this has been – so far,
anyway. And what a contrast with the firestorms of 2014, when Nicky Hager and
Kim Dotcom did their best to skew the election result.
To their credit, the voters paid no attention to the noisy
distractions. They took the phone off the hook.
Eric Crampton, chief economist at free-market think tank the
New Zealand Initiative (and a Canadian), wrote in a recent essay that New
Zealand is the world’s last sane place, and he could be right.
Admittedly Crampton was mainly talking about economic
factors and freedom from heavy-handed state intervention in people’s lives, but
his description could equally be applied to the way we generally conduct our political
affairs.
I remember watching a television debate in 1973 between the
Labour and National leaders, Norm Kirk and Jack Marshall. It was such a relaxed
and cordial encounter that I half expected the moderator – I think it was Ian
Johnstone – to produce a flagon of DB and pour them a beer.
Monday night’s debate between Bill English and Jacinda
Ardern wasn’t quite that cosy, but it was a mutually respectful contest between
two basically decent people who want the best for their country.
Even the studio audience seemed admirably even-handed. We should
be proud to live in such a mature democracy.
Sure, the campaign has had its moments of high drama. And
elections are always polarising, the more so when you factor in the angry
buzzing on social media, which amplifies ideological differences.
Besides, New Zealand politics hasn’t always been so
good-tempered. The 1984 campaign, when Robert Muldoon was fighting for his
political life, comes to mind. With Muldoon, there was always an undercurrent
of menace – a feeling that you never knew quite what he was capable of, if
pushed.
But back to that 1973 television debate. I had been living in
Australia at the time and was struck by the contrast between our style of
politics and that of our neighbours across the Ditch.
Everything about Australian politics was, and still is, more
extreme and combative. Their conservatives are more reactionary, their radical
lefties more doctrinaire, their factional powerbrokers more ruthless and their mavericks
more unhinged.
Even when Australia’s not in election mode, its politics are
far more febrile and polarised than ours. Right now the country is on the point
of combusting over same-sex marriage, with the gay rights lobby using all
manner of spurious arguments to torpedo a government proposal that would –
heaven forbid – give voters a say on the issue.
It doesn’t help that the Australian news media are highly
politicised, with the major Fairfax papers and the state-owned Australian
Broadcasting Corporation actively taking a left-leaning line while the Murdoch-owned Australian adopts a conservative
position. People who complain of media bias here don’t know the half of it.
The danger to democracy of journalists taking sides is amply
illustrated by a recent article in which the editor of the leftist Guardian Australia, Lenore Taylor, made
it clear she wouldn’t be giving editorial space to opponents of same-sex
marriage because … well, because she didn’t agree with them.
Here, laid bare, is the logical consequence of the insidious
notion that the principle of “objectivity” in journalism is a myth and
therefore can be disregarded.
Objectivity means, among other things, an obligation to be
even-handed in the presentation of news. This concept has underpinned
mainstream journalism for decades, but journalism textbooks and tutors now
teach that “balance” gets in the way of truth-telling and serves the interests
of the rich and powerful.
The result is that many journalists (who tend, by instinct, to have leftist sympathies) now feel they have
licence to ignore anything that doesn’t align with their own views.
Objectivity serves as a vital check against abuse of media
power, because the moment journalists take it on themselves to decide which
opinions are fit for public consumption, democracy is in trouble.
New Zealand isn’t immune from this trend, as is obvious from
the increasingly common usage by journalists of loaded words such as “sexist”,
“racist” and “misogynist” to dismiss views they don’t approve of. But it’s not
happening on the same scale, and certainly nowhere near as brazenly, as in
Australia, where the media are up to their armpits in partisan politics.
The implications, if the principle of objectivity is
abandoned, don’t need to be spelled out. Democracy depends on people casting an
informed vote, and once news organisations start withholding information they
don’t like, the liberal democracy model that we’re now seeing in action is at
risk.
1 comment:
Well stated Karl. Relieving for this member of the public to see it stated. And the bolder the better. Once the media is happily biased, then it is easy for it to be the tool of tirants to use for wrong. And lets start with those who owns them; Murd...?
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