I sometimes get the feeling that the lobby group that calls
itself the New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union is seen by journalists as a front for
the National Party. This would explain why it doesn’t always get the media attention it deserves.
The perception of political partisanship is understandable,
given that one of the NZTU’s co-founders was opinion pollster and Kiwiblog owner
David Farrar, who is closely associated with National.
But it’s also unfair, because since its establishment in
2013 (under a National government, as it happens), the NZTU has generally been consistent
and even-handed in its attacks on the wasteful use of taxpayers’
money. It was often critical of National when the party was in power and has even
supported Labour policies.
If anything, this places it more in ACT’s ideological
territory than National’s. National may profess to believe in limited
government, but the party has often been happy to spray money around if there
was political advantage to be gained.
The NZTU has further demonstrated its worth by monitoring
local government spending. Some of the outrageous rorts perpetrated by councils
and their misnamed bastard children, the so-called council-controlled
organisations, might have escaped public attention if it weren’t for the
union’s vigilance.
Whistle-blowers such as the NZTU should be especially valued
in an election year, when political parties go all-out in a shameless bidding
war for votes. The public needs to be constantly reminded that it’s our money they’re
generously volunteering to spend – and in many cases, waste.
The Provincial Growth Fund calls for particularly close scrutiny,
although we probably have to accept that we’ll never know the true cost of the
prize demanded by Winston Peters in return for his puny 7 per cent share of the
vote at the last election.
That’s because the PGF – alternatively known as the New
Zealand First Survival Fund – makes nonsense of all normal rules relating to
transparency and accountability.
But it wasn’t irresponsible spending that prompted one of
the NZTU’s recent public statements. Demonstrating that it also keeps an eye on
wider public-interest issues, the union asked some sharp questions about the
government’s proposal to merge the two state-owned broadcasters, RNZ and TVNZ.
People forget that we have been down this road before. State
radio and television co-existed under the same organisation, the New Zealand
Broadcasting Corporation, until 1975, when they were split into separate
entities.
What’s more, both radio and TV earned revenue from
advertising without compromising the public service broadcasting ethos – so contrary
to broadcasting purists’ fears, it’s possible to manage the conflict between
the two.
But the media environment is very different now, and as the
NZTU statement pointed out, the prospect of a TVNZ-RNZ merger raises other
issues. These relate to such crucial democratic concerns as freedom of
expression and diversity of information sources.
At a time when most privately owned media outlets are
struggling to survive, a taxpayer-funded super-broadcaster would wield enormous
power. Cushioned by state funding while still free to earn commercial revenue,
it could push private competitors to the wall. A probable consequence is that New
Zealanders would be deprived of alternative sources of information and
opinion.
Almost inevitably, such a monolithic broadcaster would lean
politically to the left. That’s the default setting of state-owned broadcast
organisations internationally, and there’s no reason to suppose things would be
different in a New Zealand super-broadcaster. The evidence is there already.
As NZTU spokesman Louis Houlbrooke said: “In today’s
opinion-led, personality-dominated media environment, journalism tends to push
one political narrative or another.
“This is tolerable when audiences have a choice of outlets –
we can always switch to a different channel. However, problems arise when the
government tries to convert commercial operators into ‘public service’
platforms, with taxpayers forced to fund material they find politically
distasteful.”
Houlbrooke urged Broadcasting Minister Kris Faafoi to
instruct consultants PwC, who are putting together a business case for the
merger, to include a requirement for political diversity.
Well, I won’t be holding my breath. As things stand, there’s a
real risk that a left-of-centre government will green-light the merger proposal
without much, if any, consideration of the need for an informed democracy to have access
to a wide range of information and opinion. After all, it suits Labour and the
Greens to have a powerful broadcasting organisation that’s broadly sympathetic
to their political agenda.
All of this raises another important issue highlighted by
NZTU chairman Barrie Saunders, a former journalist with public broadcasting
experience. [Disclosure: Barrie Saunders is an old friend of mine and a former
colleague.]
As Saunders says, the future of state broadcasting is too
important to be left to politicians and broadcasting chiefs with their own agendas. Labelling the proposed restructuring process “disgraceful”,
he called for cross-party involvement and public input. Proper practice, he
said, would be for the government to issue a White Paper for public discussion.
After all, as Saunders pointed out, there’s no urgency –
unless, of course, the process is being driven by political self-interest.
2 comments:
Or, we could just get the public sector out of it altogether.
After all, having a broadcasting company/corporation is NOT one of the core missions of Government.
Yeah, I know I'm dreaming... sorry.
I know I risk repeating myself, but why don’t complainers just stop watching and/or listening to anything from TVNZ or RNZ. It’s not difficult.
Much was made recently of RNZ's decision (since reversed) to excise Concert from FM frequencies. Paul Thompson and his cronies made a right pig's breakfast of it, with the excuse that space was needed for younger listeners. Really?! One feature of the furore was that we 'oldies'' who listen to Concert, including its occasional news bulletins fed from NatRad, were lampooned by the moderns as being back in the dark ages somewhere. Most young people, ie. those <40, get their audio and brainwashing fixes from just about anywhere but RNZ. TVNZ is a different beast, however. A merger of RNZ and TVNZ would simply produce a mishmash of what its producers believe is necessary and good or us and, with the exception of its adherents and disciples, be largely ignored.
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