The Free Speech Union
held its annual general meeting last weekend in Christchurch. I was part
of a panel that discussed free speech and the media. The following were my
introductory remarks, which refer to incidents previously covered on this blog.
Two years ago I was invited to write a regular opinion
column for the National Business Review,
a paper for which I had once worked in the distant past. A contract was signed
and I duly submitted my first column.
It was also my last. The co-editors of NBR disagreed with a couple of points I had made and wanted to
delete two crucial paragraphs. I refused, the column never appeared, and the
contract was torn up.
My column, ironically enough, was essentially about the
culture wars and their chilling impact on public debate. In it I said, among
other things, that a truly honest debate about race relations in New Zealand
would acknowledge that while Maori had
suffered damaging long-term consequences from colonisation, they had also
benefited from the abolition of slavery, tribal warfare and cannibalism.
I also said that an
honest debate would acknowledge that race relations in New Zealand had mostly
been harmonious and respectful.
One of the two co-editors
proposed to delete those two paragraphs. I was told by email: “We want to avoid
a hostile response for no real gain”. Now there’s editorial courage for you.
In fact it turned
out that the real problem was that he disagreed with what I had said. It was
his opinion that cannibalism, slavery and tribal warfare would have ended
anyway regardless of colonisation, and he disputed my opinion that race
relations had been mostly harmonious – this from a Scottish expatriate who had
lived in New Zealand only a relatively short time, so had limited experience on
which to base his opinion.
I invite you to
consider the irony of my being contracted to write an opinion column,
presumably because it was felt I had something worthwhile to say, and then
being censored because my opinion was one the editor didn’t share.
In a past life as an
editorial executive with a metropolitan daily newspaper, I spent more than 10 years dealing
almost daily with columnists of every conceivable political stripe. In all that
time, no column was censored because the paper disapproved of what was said.
All that concerned us was that the columns shouldn’t be defamatory or factually
incorrect.
It seems that on NBR, two other factors must be
considered: the column must be one the editors agree with, and it mustn’t risk
offending anyone.
My second example of
censorship occurred last year. Some of you will be familiar with NZ Politics Daily, which is a collection
of political news stories and opinion columns compiled by the respected political
scientist Bryce Edwards and distributed every day by email. It’s an influential
guide to what’s happening in politics.
A senior political
journalist, a member of the parliamentary press gallery, objected to the fact
that NZ Politics Daily sometimes
included pieces that I had written and surreptitiously emailed Bryce Edwards
urging him not to publish them.
This journalist
described me as a racist and a misogynist. He concluded with the line: “I think
your readers would do well not to be served up this trash.”
This was another
first for me. It’s hardly unusual for journalists to disagree with each other
or engage in bitchy personal rivalry, but to call for someone to be cancelled because
you don’t approve of what they write crosses a very perilous threshold.
This journalist’s
sneaky, would-be hatchet job – which Edwards rightly rebuffed – reinforced my
suspicion that some journalists are more than merely ignorant of the importance
of free speech in a liberal democracy. They are actively hostile to it.
To return to the NBR episode, I should say here that I absolutely
defend the right of newspaper owners to decide what they will or will not
publish. They must be free to say what they want, within the law, and even to
suppress material they don’t like. That is part of the package of rights known
as freedom of the press. But they must accept that it comes with a proviso.
Media owners need to
understand their vital role in a liberal democracy as enablers of
robust public debate. They also need to accept that if they abandon that role
by taking it upon themselves to dictate and restrict the opinions the public is allowed to read
and hear, they risk relinquishing whatever credibility and public respect they
enjoy.
I’ve written two
published works about press freedom in New Zealand, one in 1994 and another in
2005. When I wrote those, any threat to press freedom was seen principally as
likely to come from the state.
But here we are in
2023, and press freedom is being steadily undermined from within, by people who
seem not to value the traditions of openness and free speech that give the
media their legitimacy and moral authority. They have repudiated a tradition of
balance and fairness that has existed for the best part of one hundred years,
and in the process they have fatally compromised their own standing. I don’t
think anyone saw this coming.
The key problem
here, as I see it, is that the media have abandoned their traditional role of trying
to reflect society as it is. Instead they have positioned themselves as
advocates for the sort of society they think
we should be. This almost inevitably
requires the exclusion of opinions that stand in the way of that vision.
Public opinion has
become largely irrelevant. The media have set themselves above and apart from
the communities they purport to serve, and in the process they have severed the
vital connection that gives them their legitimacy. They have so compromised
themselves that I think their future must be in doubt. Thank you.
The centrepiece of the Free Speech Union
meeting was the keynote address by the distinguished British jurist and
historian Lord Jonathan Sumption, which can be read here. It was a masterful
and compelling summary of the attacks being made on freedom of speech and the
reasons why they must be opposed.