(2.00 pm)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right. Well?
Closing submissions by MR MILLAR
MR MILLAR
Sir, I appear on behalf of the Telegraph Media
Group.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, after ten months, Mr Millar,
I've got that.
MR MILLAR
Thank you for the opportunity to address the
Inquiry and the time allocated to my client to do so.
We have, just for the record, put in full written
submissions.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I have seen them, I have them in
front of me and I can assist you by saying I've read
them. They will, of course, be published.
MR MILLAR
I'm very grateful.
The aim of these submissions is not to, insofar as
that's possible, repeat what's in the written
submissions. I do, however, want to say a few words at
the outset about phone hacking and unlawful or unethical
journalistic practices generally.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Millar, I'd be very grateful for
that because I take the point you make about the
Telegraph's position, which you make very clearly in
your submissions, but of course I won't be addressing
the Telegraph in terms, or indeed any of the titles in
terms, because I'm seeking to address the culture,
practice and ethics of the press or a section of the
press, and therefore the assistance I'm seeking from you
and from others, as I suggested this morning, is really
concerned with the conclusions I should reach about the
overall position.
MR MILLAR
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And I appreciate that you can say,
"Well, we run our title, we don't run the other titles",
and I can only then ask you to have listened to all the
evidence I've heard and help me reach what conclusions
I should reach about culture, practice and ethics.
MR MILLAR
Yes, I will be endeavouring to do that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's fine.
MR MILLAR
But it would be remiss of me not to say at least
a word at the outset about those matters.
Then I want to focus on, time being limited,
essentially three things.
First, as you've mentioned, sir, the culture,
practices and ethics of the press, the area you're asked
to explore into in part 1 of your Inquiry. Secondly,
the future of the press in the Internet age. And
thirdly, the future regulation of the press, as to which
you must now make your recommendations.
The Telegraph was and remains appalled at the
revelations about phone hacking which led to this
Inquiry being established. Such activities are a very
long way removed from the responsible journalism in the
public interest which the Telegraph strives to provide
to its readers. And, as we've said at paragraph 21 in
our written submission, when something has gone wrong,
newspapers should own up and seek to put it right.
This has to happen in relation to phone hacking and
all other unlawful and unethical journalistic practices
identified by this Inquiry.
The evidence of Murdoch MacLennan, TMG's chief
executive, was that phone hacking was, and I quote,
"non-existent" at the Telegraph. He was able to say
this with confidence. First, when this Inquiry was set
up, TMG carried out a thorough internal review going
back to 2005 that found no evidence that any Telegraph
journalist has been involved in any hacking or indeed
any criminal conduct at all during this period.
Moreover, none of the Telegraph titles appear in the
so-called "league table" produced by the Information
Commissioner identifying newspapers which had sought
access to private data through the private investigator
Steve Whittamore. That, of course, goes back before
2005.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You'll forgive me, Mr Millar, if
I accept of course what you've said and I understand
what Mr MacLennan said about the research that he'd
done, but just so that it's known, I would be surprised
if the Information Commissioner happened to alight upon
the only private detective in the country who was
working for media clients. I'm not for a moment
suggesting the Telegraph were involved in anything.
MR MILLAR
I understand.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But you understand the point I'm
making.
MR MILLAR
I understand, but one can only work with the
evidence one has.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Of course, I quite understand.
MR MILLAR
We believe that all of this is because of the
high professional standards the Telegraph insists upon
from its journalists. And -- and this is important --
in the unlikely event that it were to find itself with,
if I can put it this way, one rogue reporter, the
Telegraph has strict financial and editorial governance
systems. These would quite simply make it impossible
for such a reporter to pay private investigators to
gather information illegally or to pay bribes.
You, sir, I know, appreciate that not all British
newspapers are open to the sorts of charges of
malpractice that led to this Inquiry being established.
The Telegraph is a prime example of one which is not.
But it is important also that the public and our
politicians understand that this is the case and that we
start from that understanding.
With those introductory comments, I turn to my and
your first heading: the culture, practices and ethics of
the press.
It's logical to consider first the historical issues
identified at subparagraphs 1(c) and 1(d) of your terms
of reference, namely the extent to which the current
regulatory framework has failed and the extent to which
there was a failure to act on previous warnings about
media misconduct.
As to the current regulatory framework, that is by
now, of course, well known. PressBoF, the Press Board
of Finance, raises funding from the industry to support
the system of self-regulation in its entirety. You've
heard evidence indicating that it's been very successful
in doing this in the years since its inception in 1990.
Over £30 million-worth of funding has been provided to
the Press Complaints Commission via PressBoF during this
period. It's funded the PCC in full against agreed
budgets.
This is not something to be sniffed at in times when
public funding for regulators is under serious pressure
as a result of the financial crisis.
The PCC deals with complaints but the rules applied
in doing so are written and updated by editors in the
Editors' Code Committee, a subcommittee of PressBoF.
TMG, as you know, is a strong supporter of the Editors'
Code.
Now the evidence on the topic has concluded, we
would suggest a number of key points need to be
remembered about the Code.
First and most importantly, the Code has received
widespread acceptance across the industry during its
time in existence. We would suggest that that is
precisely because it is drafted by editors who are
working in newspapers and magazines and who understand
how they operate.
Secondly, this process permits the Code to be
updated regularly to keep pace with developments, both
in society and in the industry, and indeed the
continuous flow of PCC adjudications. This can happen
without undue formality or delay under the current
system.
Thirdly, in 1998, Parliament enacted section 12(4)
of the Human Rights Act, requiring courts to take
account of any relevant privacy code when considering
whether to grant relief which might affect the right to
freedom of expression.
The relevant provisions of the Editors' Code had
only recently been updated to comply with the
contemporary European Convention on Human Rights
standards, and Parliament did so. It enacted
section 12(4) with the privacy provisions of the Code in
mind, and that surely represents a valuable endorsement
of the Code.
It's easy to forget the numerous specific
achievements of the Editors' Code Committee. For
example, you, sir, I'm sure will recall, as many of us
who practised in the 1980s and 1990s will, that
witnesses at criminal trials were very often bought up
by certain newspapers.
This presented problems for the administration of
justice, in particular as to their credibility at trial.
The Editors' Code Committee introduced clear and tough
rules, now under paragraph 15, setting out the
limited -- extremely limited -- circumstances in which
such payments might justifiably be made. These rules
have been complied with and since then that particular
problem -- one of that age, if I can put it that way --
has effectively disappeared.
Secondly, the rules on subterfuge were revised in
2007 following the Goodman/Mulcaire convictions to cover
the activities of journalistic sources and agents, such
as private detectives. That's paragraph 10(2). And
successive updates of the Code, as I say, responding to
concerns about newspaper activities, have protected both
children and hospital patients when the subject of press
activity.
The predecessor of the PCC, the Press Council, had
not managed to introduce an editorial code at all, and
it's easy to lose sight of the effect that the Editors'
Code has had more generally since 1990 in changing
practices in the vast majority of newsrooms. Where an
issue arises that is covered by the Code, the relevant
provisions are considered and applied in most newsrooms.
It does not seem to us that any of the evidence you have
had would contradict that proposition. Certainly so at
the Telegraph, where, as Mr MacLennan told you, the
journalists live by the Code.
It's important to remember that this process has
raised standards considerably across this period from
1990 to date. What it's done is to enable occasions of
malpractice to be identified and characterised as being,
quote, "in breach of the Code", and that in turn has
created a culture in which, in the vast majority of
cases, ethical breaches are noted, responded to swiftly
and rectified effectively and prominently by the
newspaper concerned.
PressBoF also guarantees the existence and
development of the Press Complaints Commission.
The latter point, continuous development of the
bodies within the regulatory framework as well as the
rules, is an important aspect of a system created by the
industry and independent of statute.
It can keep recreating itself under its own
arrangements. Thus, during the same period, PressBoF
has, for example, extended the remit of the PCC beyond
print news publication to cover online newspapers and
magazines. It has introduced public appointments
procedures for membership. It's strengthened the lay
majority on the Press Complaints Commission. It's
introduced public consultation into the annual reviews
of the Editors' Code, and in 2007 extended the PCC's
remit to cover editorial audiovisual content that now
appears on newspaper and magazine websites.
It has been said that the evolution of the PCC has
not been quick enough or far-reaching enough, and with
hindsight the Telegraph would not disagree with that.
The point we make here is simply that this sort of
evolution can happen efficiently and organically under
a system established and accepted by the industry.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But it only identifies occasions of
malpractice and characterises them as being "in breach
of the Code" if there is a complaint made by somebody
who falls within the comparatively limited definition of
those who can complain.
MR MILLAR
Yes. I'm coming to that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Right.
MR MILLAR
There are other points to be made about the PCC.
There are failings and shortfalls. I'm going to
identify and accept them. That's part of the process of
analysis by which you get to the case we're putting
forward on regulation.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's a very polite way, Mr Millar,
of saying, "Just listen and stop interrupting me", and
I shall.
MR MILLAR
The PCC has -- and this is really the point,
sir, you've just made -- we would say, for the most part
proved effective in dealing with single complaints from
the public within its terms of reference; doing so
swiftly and without cost.
It can be very effective in intervening or mediating
or heading off a problem presented by a particular
story.
Mr Gallagher, for example, the editor of the Daily
Telegraph, said he has what he described as a very
healthy relationship with the PCC. As he put it:
"They can pick up the phone and they can send an
email to me, and they're very quick to point out where
there's an issue with a particular person that is
requiring or demanding privacy".
So that aspect of the PCC's activity is not to be
underestimated or undervalued. But throughout this
hearing Telegraph witnesses have acknowledged the
shortcomings of the PCC.
First, it operates more as a mediator of particular
disputes. Mr Gallagher's predecessor, Will Lewis, had
earlier in the same session memorably said,
"I understand the PCC up until this point to have been
a mediator with a regulatory reputation". And he
concurred with the emerging consensus for a more
independent, genuinely self-regulatory system.
Mr Lewis's characterisation may be a good one and it
might have come to be thought of as an industry
regulator, for want of a better word, actually to
describe its more limited role.
Second, and in consequence of the first point --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It also described itself as
"a regulator".
MR MILLAR
Maybe for the same reason. But it is
acknowledged, I think by common consent now, the
evidence has concluded at this Inquiry, that in the
strict use of that term it is certainly not a regulator,
and has not had available to it regulatory powers in the
true sense.
It lacks the powers to deal with systemic ethical or
governance failures; in particular newspapers as opposed
to one-off complaints. That is clear from the evidence
that you've heard at this Inquiry. As Lord Black
acknowledged in his evidence, this means that there are
some instances of non-compliance with the code -- big
instances -- which are simply beyond the PCC's control
or outside of its remit. When one of these, like phone
hacking, comes up, the reputation of the PCC is
severely, and it would appear in the case of phone
hacking, fatally damaged.
Thirdly, there is a perceived lack of independence
because of the direct relationship between PressBoF and
the PCC, the adjudicatory body.
Fourthly, there is the problem of the reluctant
publisher. Lord Black also acknowledged that operating
a voluntary system makes it difficult to deal with the
occasional rogue publisher who wants to pick and choose
when its in or out of the complaints system.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You need to be careful about the
description "rogue", because there may be very good
reasons why that particular publisher doesn't want to be
within the system, which may itself reveal systemic
problems.
So, for example -- if I don't take the obvious one
but if I take the example of Mr Hislop -- Mr Hislop made
it abundantly clear that there was absolutely no reason
whatsoever why he should participate in the PCC because
his periodical, every week, week in, week out, laid bare
criticisms of all those papers whose editors were
represented on the PCC. So that is a systemic issue,
quite apart from what might be other issues. Isn't it?
MR MILLAR
Yes. I ought to say, I was using the word
"rogue" because it was the word that Lord Black had used
in his evidence.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR MILLAR
And I was summarising his evidence.
We take that point, but the ideal is to have as many
signed up as possible. Indeed, the ideal is to have
everybody signed up.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Absolutely no question about that.
MR MILLAR
And Private Eye is, with all due respect, a very
unusual publication in the firmament of British
publications. There aren't any other examples --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
There are other examples. You could
then take -- now inevitably I'll take Northern & Shell.
You didn't have to have the insight of a great thinker
to appreciate that Mr Desmond has views about some of
the editors who he sees are really running the PCC, and
equally you don't have to be very perceptive to realise
that they have views about him. That's all fair enough.
Everybody's entitled to think what they wish about their
competitors. But the thing that a regulator has to be
is to be independent of all of that, doesn't it?
MR MILLAR
Yes. The point is well made and it's taken, and
I'll say "stray" rather than "rogue".
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm not criticising you or
Lord Black.
MR MILLAR
The aim must also be to have a consensual
regulatory system that doesn't give rise to
a publisher -- and certainly not a major publisher --
expressing concerns such as those as the basis for not
participating in the system. That must be the aim. And
I think that is well recognised now as a result of all
the water that's flowed under the bridge at this
Inquiry.
So, as you will gather from the recent remark that
I've made, the Telegraph accepts the case for replacing
the PCC with something better.
As to 1(d), the extent to which there was a failure
to act to previous warnings about media misconduct, in
light of everything I've just said, the correct answer
to this question is that the industry system in
existence hitherto has been unable or ill-equipped to
act effectively when facing serious examples of
non-compliance.
But it would be wrong, just for the record, to
suggest that there has been a complete failure by the
industry to act in the face of warning signs.
To take the trade in data and phone hacking as the
most immediate examples, as Lord Black explained in his
first statement, the industry did respond to warning
signs in these areas. As I've already mentioned, in
2007, following the Goodman/Mulcaire convictions, the
subterfuge rules in the Editors' Code were amended to
cover hacking, and to make clear that exactly the same
ethical rules applied to acts of private investigators
on behalf of newspapers.
The industry, through PressBoF, also worked with the
PCC to implement the six recommendations contained in
its now much criticised 2007 report on phone hacking in
the wake of the conviction of Goodman and Mulcaire.
You've heard evidence about those and they would have
been, if implemented, rules which would have prevented
future misuse of cash to pay contributors to act
illegally. So they were the right rules at the right
time.
Then following the publication by the Information
Commissioner of "What price privacy?", PressBoF
co-ordinated through the industry associations an
information campaign to emphasise to all journalists the
importance of respecting the legislation on data
protection, and the Inquiry has a copy of the relevant
guidance note.
So, as I say, the problem was not no response. It
was that the response was unsuccessful, in part because
of the limited powers of the PCC, its inability to go
beyond taking steps such as the ones that I've just
listed.
As far as individual publishers are concerned, I can
only speak for my client, the Telegraph.
At this level there's always been a notable
commitment to action when warning signs appeared. For
example, as you've heard, TMG led the industry's
response to "What price privacy?" that I've just
mentioned. And although it had not been criticised by
the Information Commissioner in 2008, it updated its own
expenses policy to make clear that all payments to
sources or intermediaries had to be made through the
company's contributor system, requiring audited BACS
transfers and editorial scrutiny.
Although none of its journalists had hacked phones,
events at the News of the World prompted Mr MacLennan to
issue a consolidated code of conduct to all editorial
staff, with a covering letter reminding them of their
obligation to maintain the very highest standards in
their work.
So what is the Inquiry to say about the culture,
practices and ethics of the British press, about which
it's heard so much evidence, some relating to phone
hacking, but going a long way beyond that single unhappy
topic?
I look at culture, first. I suppose the first
question is: what are you being asked about here? One
has to define one's terms. Here it seems to us that
you're being asked about essentially shared mental
assumptions within each organisation, the assumptions
that guide both interpretation -- interpretation of the
Editors' Code -- and action by defining what is or is
not appropriate behaviour for a variety of situations.
Different situations.
The problem, of course, is that in a large industry
such as the British press, diverse and sometimes
conflicting cultures are liable to co-exist due to
different characteristics of the particular editorial
and management teams at the particular newspaper.
Certainly different newspapers -- we know this
much -- behave differently in the same situation. Some
may feel that the public interest justifies running
a particular story or photograph or investigating in
a particular way, where others may not.
Is this because they're guided by different shared
assumptions about how newspapers should act and what
they should publish, particularly where their action
impacts on the rights or sensibilities of others?
We would say that the answer to this question, on
the evidence you've heard, is yes. That is not to say
that one can always or easily identify a right or
a wrong way of acting as a newspaper in a particular
situation.
At the extremes, you clearly can. As we said,
no one in their right mind could try to defend the
hacking of Milly Dowler's phone by journalists. On the
other hand, no journalist would say you should not
publish a story about a Cabinet Minister accepting
corrupt payments because his or her financial affairs
are private.
But where the judgment calls have been made in the
vast middle ground between those two types of extreme
example, it seems to us clear that different newsrooms
operate on different shared mental assumptions; for
example, about what readers want to read, how much
privacy celebrities should have given that they are
celebrities and they put aspects of their life into the
public domain, how much fact-checking is required for
a story and crucially, what or what is not defensible as
being in the public interest?
I'm just picking some examples there from the
evidence that you've heard. It must be clear to you
from the evidence that all of that is the case. It
seems to us to be the case, and we say that you should
recognise that in your report and make findings in
recognition of that fact.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's where there is the distinction
between what might be described as the "broadsheet
papers" and what might be described as the "tabloid" and
"mid-market papers", and if you are saying to me that
I must recognise that there is a range of legitimate
responses by each type of paper, then I think that's
right.
There isn't a bright line in relation to particular
stories, on one side of which nothing is permissible and
the other side of which anything is permissible. And
that line, that width, which is a grey area, is going to
move. The question is whether the process should be
different, albeit that the result, for different
reasons, might not be the same. Do you follow the point
I'm seeking to make?
MR MILLAR
I do. I think it's a little bit ahead of the
point I've got to.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
See, I didn't shut up. All right.
MR MILLAR
I will come to that. I was just trying to
tackle this question of culture, because there's a lot
in that word, and one has to ask oneself -- or, rather,
sir, you have to ask yourself: "What am I being asked to
think about and decide there?"
It seems to us from the evidence that it is this
differing set of shared assumptions that management
teams in different newspapers have about a whom range of
subjects. What their readers want to read is often put
forward as the starting point. Certainly it is in the
case of the Telegraph, which is very attuned to its
readership and what they want to read, but equally we've
heard evidence from an editor of the Sun who said
exactly the same thing. The content of the perception
is different, and that may affect the culture.
All I'm doing at this stage is recognising that that
is what the evidence at the Inquiry shows us quite
clearly. And it is a useful starting point for
analysing the rest of the issues you have to look at in
one.
A distinction between the broadsheets, mid-market
and tabloids can be a little crude. It's not for us to
suggest that there aren't perfectly good shared mental
assumptions in tabloid newspapers; they're just
different. That's the point.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think that's what I just tried to
say.
MR MILLAR
Well, I agree then.
But we certainly don't want to be taken to be
suggesting that this is in some way critical of other
forms of journalism to that which the Telegraph is known
for.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The problem --
MR MILLAR
It's just the reality of a complex, diverse
industry.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
The problems of the word "culture" go
slightly beyond that. It would be impossible to say
that it was a culture within the medical profession that
doctors behaved as Dr Shipman behaved, yet there was
still an absolute requirement to review the regulatory
mechanisms to make sure that every step was taken to
deal with a problem such as that which Dr Shipman
generated.
MR MILLAR
Sure.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It strikes me that culture,
therefore, must be more than a single example. It must
be more than a single title, if you like. It has to be
something that is perhaps a consequence of the way in
which the job has to be done or can be done, depending
upon what your aims and aspirations for your paper are.
MR MILLAR
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But neither need it be universal.
MR MILLAR
Yes. Well, look, it's not for me to address
a set of shared mental attitudes, as I've characterised
them, at any other newspaper other than the Telegraph.
But taking the Telegraph as an example, we can see --
and I'll deal with this in a moment -- that the
practices within the newspaper are the product of a set
of shared mental assumptions in management and senior
editorial posts about how journalism should be done.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I will stop interrupting, but I just
want to pick you up on what you've just said, because
I don't agree with the assertion that it's not for you
to address the shared mental culture.
That's exactly what I have to do. I have to look at
the culture, practices and ethics of the press, and the
assistance that I would like from you, and indeed from
all those who are to speak, is very much their
perception of what the evidence reveals --
MR MILLAR
I understand that, sir. Maybe I put the point
badly.
I am saying that when an episode like phone hacking
occurs, you can say it's the consequence of the culture
in that newsroom in the sense that I've described it,
because the shared set of assumptions about all these
complex things allow it to happen. I'm not running away
from that conclusion. What I didn't want to do was what
each newspaper must do itself, which is to explain the
particular cocktail of mental assumptions and attitudes
to how journalism should be done that operate within its
newsroom, because that's for others to do.
One further caveat to this is important. The
culture in an organisation can be changed. This may be
because the management team changes or because the
existing team changes its approach, including as to the
governance arrangements within the organisation.
We heard with interest, sir, your exchanges with
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Akers this morning
regarding the role of the MSC in the management of
affairs at News International. That may be a good
example of how such changes can be brought about: a big
structural change as the beginning of the process of
changing the culture.
This point is clearly very important because to the
extent that there are cultural problems in any industry
or part of an industry, it can't be assumed that
regulation, particularly, we would say, regulatory
arrangements instigated by the government, will
necessarily change those. One only has to look at the
banking industry to see that that is the case, or, dare
I say it, the House of Commons, albeit the members of
the House have always had rather fewer rules to work
under than the banking industry, especially prior to the
expenses scandal.
Sometimes the culture is changed by the public
revelation of a scandal, or succession of scandals, so
big, and to which there is such a powerful reaction,
that there is no alternative but to change. This has
proved true of the MPs' expenses scandal in relation to
the claiming of allowances by our Parliamentarians, and
it may yet prove to be true of the banking crash,
particularly as matters such as the LIBOR fixing scandal
emerge into the public domain.
Sometimes the intervention of the law, especially
the criminal law, alongside the public revelations and
outrage can also shock or even frighten people into
changing, but peer or industry pressure to change and
pressure from advertisers and the public, public
opinion, is likely to play a big role in this situation,
bigger, we would suggest, than what's written down in
rules required by Parliament.
The Inquiry must bear this in mind, if you accept
our submission on this point, because we say it's likely
to be true of the phone hacking scandal and the
subsequent allegations of other different types of
journalistic malpractice that have been made since last
summer.
There has been a massive public response, expression
of outrage, and the industry is under enormous pressure,
where there are problems in the culture, to change those
in response to that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
One might have said the same at
earlier times in the history of press investigations.
MR MILLAR
Well, I was going to say next that repeated
reference has been made at this Inquiry to the setting
up of the Calcutt Committee in 1989, but it has to be
remembered that the then Prime Minister, Margaret
Thatcher, set up the Calcutt Committee because of
progressive loss of confidence in the Press Council in
the 1980s, which was felt not to have the powers and not
to be doing the job.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
If you read some the evidence that
I've seen about that, it was felt that the press
themselves undermined the work of the Press Council.
MR MILLAR
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And they didn't like the Press
Council so what they went about doing -- this is some of
the material that I've seen -- is rubbishing it
publicly, and therefore the public lost all confidence
in it.
MR MILLAR
Yes, but that happened over a period.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Certainly.
MR MILLAR
And during that decade, there were certainly
many examples of unethical journalism; chequebook
journalism, the example I gave earlier: buying up
witnesses being one of the big examples, and other
intrusions into privacy.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, that didn't stop then, because
the biggest outrage about buying up witnesses occurred
in 1995 during the prosecution of Rosemary West and
those witnesses, the Cromwell Street murders.
MR MILLAR
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I don't need to be reminded of any of
that; it's seared on my conscience.
MR MILLAR
There were some other big examples. The
Yorkshire Ripper case, as well, where there were many
documented cases of attempts to buy up witnesses.
But the point I'm making is that those examples and
those concerns about intrusions into privacy were
building up over a period. It wasn't a single one-off
scandal of the scale of phone hacking that prompted
almost overnight the setting up of the Inquiry.
So, with respect, the background is qualitatively
different here.
As far as practices is concerned, we would say the
position is the same in relation to practices; the next
thing you're asked to look at.
The practices of an organisation tend to be
determined by the aims of the leadership. And it's
apparent from the account I've given of the Telegraph's
internal systems that that can be to the benefit of the
organisation as far as practices are concerned. Thus
the clear aim of management has been to avoid cash
payments to private investigators and the like, so it's
made clear to all editorial staff this is an
unacceptable practice and arrangements are put in place
to prevent it and effectively make it impossible. Thus
management aims affect practice.
Again, the evidence you have heard, we accept, shows
that permitted practices can differ from newspaper to
newspaper, as with culture.
As far as ethics is concerned, there is, of course,
there is of course a single set of ethical rules in the
form of the Editors' Code, but TMG accepts, as suggested
by the evidence received at this Inquiry, that the
provisions of the code are simply not operated and
applied uniformly across the industry.
The Inquiry is by now familiar with the rules which
tend to be applied differently by different newspapers:
rules as to privacy, harassment, intrusion into grief,
use of subterfuge in particular.
To sum up, clearly the Inquiry can say that there
have been high profile examples of the Code not being
applied by one or more newspapers, phone hacking being
the most glaring example; but equally it has to say
there are many, many other newspapers, such as the
Telegraph titles, where the journalistic culture and
practices are exemplary and the publisher strives for
the highest possible ethical standards.
The next question is, having reached this point in
my analysis: what of the future?
I make my comments about the future of the press in
the Internet age before those relating to future
regulation, because we would suggest that no discussion
of the latter should take place without an understanding
of the former.
Changing attitudes to news consumption, and in
particular the arrival of the Internet as a mass medium
for the dissemination of news and entertainment, means
that the future of the newspaper industry is highly
uncertain at the point at which you produce your report.
People consume less and less news off the printed page.
It's startling, sir, to recall now that when the
first General Press Council was formed in 1953,
following the 1949 Royal Commission, 21 million
newspapers were sold in Britain each weekday, and 31
million on a Sunday. The weekday figure now, I believe,
is just over 9 million and falling.
Newspapers now have to compete not just with radio
and television news, but also with an ever-growing
supply of news and entertainment content in different
forms on the Internet.
As with many social trends, it's instructive to look
at the United States on the basis that what happens
there, happens here eventually, and eventually to much
the same extent. The most recent work in this area in
America has been done by the Pew Project for Excellence
in Journalism. It's a non-profit research project in
Washington, a fact tank, specialising in the impact of
the Internet on society, and one strand of it is the
Project for Excellence in Journalism.
The State of the Media survey by Pew in 2011
revealed 46 per cent of those polled saying they read
their news online at least three times a week, passing
newspapers at 40 per cent for the first time.
In a separate investigation by Pew, 47 per cent of
those polled said they get some news from mobile devices
such as cell phones, e-readers and tablets each week.
Pew reports that this trend is increasing rapidly. This
is important because three-quarters of those polled in
this part of the poll said they would not be prepared to
pay anything for news received via apps. Yet I'm
instructed, and I think you've been told in evidence,
that each additional form or format in which the
newspaper has to curate and then disseminate and publish
information, increases the overheads of the newspaper.
So there are two different graphs going in two
different directions there at the moment.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I don't understand how people can
expect to receive well-researched investigative
journalism, which gives the public information so that
the public can hold power to account, and not pay for
it. I don't see how that's an equation that can ever
ultimately work.
MR MILLAR
You're right about that. We share that concern.
But the logical conclusion of that analysis may be that
investigative journalism shrinks to a vanishing point
unless it can find streams of income to fund it and
people are prepared to fund it to enable it to happen;
but people aren't prepared to pay for it.
The same is true of quality journalism. If they're
not prepared to pay for it in a fragmented market, as a
particular thing they buy in an app, part of the output
of a newspaper, the industry is in a very difficult
situation as far as that sort of content is concerned.
And I think that's widely recognised.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. It's a much, much bigger
problem than having to cope with the problems of
regulation, whatever form regulation might ultimately
be.
MR MILLAR
Let's just say it's another problem that the
industry faces.
Reduced newspaper sales mean lost circulation
revenues and lower advertising revenues. The 2011 Pew
survey revealed that in 2010, both digital news
readership and advertising revenue from digital streams
in the US surpassed that of newspapers for the first
time.
So far as advertising revenues are concerned, this
is so not because there have been large increases in
digital advertising revenue, but rather because the loss
of print advertising revenue has been so dramatic.
The most recent Pew survey in March of this year
looked in detail at 38 American newspapers, of necessity
regional or local, because that's the way the press
operates there. This showed that for every $7 lost in
newspaper advertising revenue, the newspapers in the
survey were picking up only an additional $1 in digital
advertising revenues. I'm instructed by my client that
a similar displacement ratio has occurred with many
British newspapers. Online advertising rates are more
competitive and are simply much lower.
This factor is particularly important for the sort
of local and regional papers that Pew was surveying, and
is for our local and regional papers.
Lastly, of course, there's no equivalent to the
newspaper's cover price with the Internet. The fact
that news is free on the rest of the Internet means it's
difficult to run a newspaper website on a subscription
basis.
The Internet has also changed patterns of news
consumption. The Internet is dramatically altering
these, in three ways in particular. First, the reach of
existing news organisations is being widened. Their
reporting is accessible to a global audience. So online
newspapers such as the Telegraph are competing in a much
bigger global market.
Secondly, more and more readers are accessing their
news through online-only news providers, such as the
Huffington Post. Some of these operate largely as low
overhead aggregators of other Internet news content,
usually content gathered at the considerable expense of
a newspaper such as my client, the Telegraph.
We don't get the browser, the person doing the
browsing, making it harder to keep advertising revenues
up, but the browser gets the fruit of our news gathering
and our journalism.
Thirdly, there is this thing called "crowd-sourced
news", which is a phrase I hadn't heard before I started
looking at this over the weekend. This is the phrase
for something you have heard evidence about, which is
news content from a variety of Internet news sources
being aggregated and pushed at online readers via large
social media platforms like Google, Google News and
Yahoo News, and portals like MSN. This has precisely
the same disadvantage from our point of view as the
other aggregators like Huffington.
So the upshot is that a paper like TMG now has to
compete with other newspaper sites, online-only sites,
big broadcast sites such as that of the BBC and news
agency sites such as Reuters.
We're not suggesting there are not some winners
amongst the losers. The statistical evidence shows that
different newspapers are faring very differently in the
transition to digital. There can be success stories,
and TMG's evidence shows it to be one of these,
a profitable newspaper in a difficult time.
To achieve this, the Telegraph has had to focus
intensely on delivering to its readers and its
commercial partners the service they want. It has also
had to invest heavily in technology and digital
operations, so that it can complete on even terms with
all these other online news providers.
It now produces immediate high quality content
available to the world at large on an attractive and
accessible website and in other digital forms, but, as
I have said, at a considerable cost. And the future,
even for a successful operation like the Telegraph, is
necessarily highly uncertain. And I don't mean the
long-term future. We're talking years not decades here.
So against that slightly depressing background,
I turn to regulation.
A great deal of evidence has been given about the
future of press regulation. There's also much argument
in the written closing submissions. The Inquiry is
aware that TMG supports the proposal put forward by its
own director, Lord Black, in his capacity as chairman of
PressBoF in Module 4.
We've set out in our written closing submissions at
paragraphs 112 to 118 the basic points we make about the
dispute, or the issue, about what form future regulation
should take. We don't want to repeat those or all of
the points made by PressBoF and the two Lords,
Lord Black and Lord Hunt, in their evidence in Module 4.
These address in detail how the proposed system put
forward by PressBoF remedies the failings of the PCC
that I identified earlier on in these submissions, and
we gratefully adopt those points.
But TMG does want to emphasise the following points,
as it were from its own particular perspective.
The Telegraph does not want to be subject to a form
of regulation which it opposed in principle -- that is
regulation following statutory intervention -- when it
does not require to be regulated in this way because it
has achieved high standards under the current system.
The same point can be made, no doubt, by many other
newspaper publishers.
TMG is also deeply concerned about the uncertain
future that it and other newspapers face. As I've said,
even profitable newspapers, such as those operated by
TMG, may find it harder and harder to be profitable as
more readers get their news through the Internet.
The proposal put forward by PressBoF is known in its
essentials and understood. It may not be perfect, but
it does not add to those concerns. It's a work in
progress and will doubtless be refined and improved.
By contrast, we've not seen any proposals formulated
by the Inquiry or by Parliament itself, and that is
inevitably and necessarily a matter of concern for us.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, hang on. What would you expect
me to do? If I'd started formulating proposals, then
I would have been criticised roundly for pre-judging
issues which I have to decide. What I have received is
a dozen sets of proposals, which I have to analyse.
MR MILLAR
It wasn't intended, sir, as a criticism of you.
It is simply a statement of fact, so that you understand
our position and you think of things from our position.
We have on the one hand a set of proposals put
forward by PressBoF which have been subject to detailed
scrutiny in this Inquiry, which we support. There is
nothing in the domain of the Inquiry, promulgated by the
Inquiry or by Parliament, saying what form regulation
following statutory intervention would take and how the
structure would operate.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But you could analyse each of the
other submissions that I have received and subject them
to the same critical analysis that the suggestions put
forward by PressBoF have been subjected to.
MR MILLAR
Of course we could, but --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And then you'll be able to say, "This
works", or, "This doesn't work".
MR MILLAR
But they're not going to make the recommendation
and they're certainly not going to make the law. And
what newspapers such as the Telegraph are asking
themselves is: if there is to be a recommendation or
a proposal for statutory underpinning, as it's been
described in this Inquiry, what will that actually
involve? How much statutory input will there be into
the terms under which the ethical code gets formulated,
the way in which the body gets constituted, the
sanctions that are to be operated, the sanctions that
are to be operated if you don't join the organisation?
Nothing on that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, you could start by looking at
the principles enunciated in Ireland, which merely
identify what a regulator ought to look like, but
doesn't either set up a regulator or indeed define its
precise remit.
MR MILLAR
But the point I'm making is: how do we know that
that is what is on offer here? That's what has to
happen. We don't, do we?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Of course we don't, because I don't
know as yet. I'm waiting to hear everything, then
I will make a recommendation, which then the Government
will either accept or reject, which the press will
either accept or reject.
MR MILLAR
No, but it's obvious there could be more or less
statute involved. There could be more or less statute
involved in each of the areas that I've described.
Mandatory rules. Things that have to be achieved.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, I understand, and the real
question is --
MR MILLAR
But we don't --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
-- how close to the wall can you
throw the penny?
MR MILLAR
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
To get a system that will work and
that will satisfy the public concern about what the
press has been up to. And I say "the press", not "the
Telegraph". "The press".
MR MILLAR
But how close to the wall can you throw the
penny doesn't help in terms of trying to envisage what
a statutory framework would look like, or how much
statutory material would influence the setting of the
terms of the ethical code.
You'll be familiar with the legislation that set up
Ofcom. There were clear imperatives governing the
formulation of the Ofcom code.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, I'd be surprised if I went down
a route that sought to recommend a system that
replicated Ofcom. I would be very surprised if
I reached that conclusion.
MR MILLAR
We're glad to hear that, but the point I'm
making -- and I think you understand it and accept it --
is that there are very many possible models for
statutory intervention in regulation of differing
degrees, with a different amount of statutory regulation
of, or definition of, bodies, rules, sanctions. And we
just have no idea what it might look like, if we face
it.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I agree, which is why the help would
be: what are the principles which I should be following
when seeking to devise a recommendation? And: what are
the red lines that would cause greater concern? What
are the slightly fuzzier lines where there is more room
for discussion?
That's what I thought was the debate that was
started by what Mr Dacre said as long ago as
last September, I think, when he recognised the need for
a different mechanism and he made some suggestions, some
of which I think he's stepped back from. Well, he's
perfectly entitled to that view. But I'm trying to
understand what are the principled objections.
I can understand you saying, "I recognise what the
PressBoF people are suggesting because I can see it.
How can I comment on what you're saying, because I don't
know what you're saying?" Well, I don't yet know what
I'm saying, but what I am saying is that you can help me
by identifying where the lines could be drawn without
offending what for you are absolutely unwaivable
principles.
MR MILLAR
Sir, you know the answer to that question, with
respect. The answer is that any form of statutory
intervention in the process of regulating the newspapers
is unacceptable to us.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But I don't understand why,
Mr Millar. I mean, I mean it. Mr Dacre last September
recognised there was a possibility of a need for
statutory underpinning. Not for a statute that
regulated the press. I well understand the view of the
press on that subject. But one that would facilitate
the provision of powers for the press itself to set up
an independent regulatory regime.
MR MILLAR
Well, sir, there are objections of principle.
They're set out in our written submissions at paragraphs
113 and following. I can go through them again. I fear
I'd be repeating what's in the document and evidence and
submissions that you've heard from other core
participants.
In summary, the concern is that once the door is
open to some form of statutory intervention, which we
have not had in this country for hundreds and hundreds
of years -- and I'm going to deal with Ireland in
a moment -- we're in a different ballpark.
We're in a different ballpark because the principle
has been breached. However benign the recommendations,
sir, you may make, or however close to the wall the
penny happens to be when you publish your report,
there's no guarantee that the penny, having been put
down on the pavement, will stay at that point that close
to the wall.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, I understand that point, and
I heard what Lord Wakeham said about the wishes of
Parliamentarians. All I can say is, looking at the
experience of the last 50 years, I've seen no evidence
of Parliament wanting to get more involved and to go
further than the press has been prepared to go.
Look at the outcome of each Royal Commission. Look
at the outcome of Calcutt 1. Look at the outcome of
Calcutt 2. Look at what happened after the death of
Princess Diana. They've not been straining at the leash
to impose ever more rigorous statutory interventions.
MR MILLAR
No, but if recommendations are made by you, sir,
to do it and the process is started, then the point is
we are in a different ballpark.
The Rubicon has been crossed. Prior to that, the
Rubicon hadn't been crossed. We're very concerned, not
least of all because of the vulnerable position of the
industry, that Parliament will take it upon itself to
overregulate, as Mr Barclay put it. Parliament has
a history of doing that, a tendency to do that.
Politicians and legislators are not subject to
a self-denying ordinance when it comes to the amount and
the content of regulation. Once they've got the bit
between their teeth, history tells us they can get quite
enthusiastic about it. So it's getting the bit between
their teeth that we're worried about.
There are other points of principle. The Government
and Parliament are not stakeholders in press regulation.
They should be apart from it and held to account by the
press.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I agree with that.
MR MILLAR
Yes. It is an important achievement that
a society democracy such as ours can arrive at a system
of self-regulation without the involvement of statute or
Government that works.
You say, "Well, we have to give up on that idea
now". We say, "No, we don't have to give up on that
idea now. We have to persist in that idea." And it's
a very important idea because it means the people
involved in the regulation are authors of their own
fate, and they have achieved the regulatory system that
they've achieved without legislative intervention,
without coercion. And that is in itself an end and in
itself important in a democracy.
I can say that in most instances -- nearly all
instances where one finds oneself, as I do, in emerging
democracies, discussing press regulation through the
auspices of international agencies, the Council of
Europe, the EU, the OSC -- the default position, the
primary position, is always and overwhelmingly the
arrangement of regulation and regulatory arrangements
without the involvement of the government. And there's
a very good reason for that and it's the one that I've
just given: that it gives people a stake in the result
of the regulation, which is going to make it more
effective, more likely to work.
We may have to just agree to disagree about this,
but --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm not agreeing or disagreeing at
all. I'm merely listening, Mr Millar.
MR MILLAR
You said that there are issues of principle
underpinning our position which you don't understand and
I'm putting them to you. We do understand them. We
believe in them passionately. This is our traditional
in this country, this is the British traditional. It is
a massive step to throw out the history of a free press,
by which I mean a printed press that has no statutory
intervention as far as its regulation is concerned. It
is a very, very big step.
You can look at, sir, Ireland and you can look at
Scandinavia, as you have done, where there has been
statutory intervention in press regulation, but you have
to remember that there are dramatic differences between
newspaper industries in different countries. These are
not just to do with size.
Other countries have very different traditions in
relation to controls over the print media. Most other
countries have a weaker and at least more recent
tradition than we do of a press operating entirely free
of government intervention. There would not be the same
ingrained resistance, which is what you're encountering
from the industry, to statutory intervention that you
see in this country, no doubt making it easier to
introduce in those countries.
In fact, the best comparator is the United States,
where there is a comparable tradition to ours going back
to the First Amendment, where there's no agency-related
central government which can licence or regulate the
press or indeed the Internet. And that's an article of
faith under the First Amendment.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Their press is also very different.
MR MILLAR
Their press is also very different in a lot of
respects. Structurally it's very different. But that's
not the point I'm making. The point I'm making at the
moment is that you may be comparing apples with oranges
if you compare the situation you face in the UK with
Ireland or Scandinavia. You certainly are, one would
have thought, so far as resistance to government
intervention is concerned.
Of course, it is with the US organisations providing
news services globally that our newspapers will
increasingly have to compete in the next few years.
This brings me on, sir, to the final few points
I wanted to make. I'm very mindful of the time and
I apologise for having gone over my limit.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Don't worry, Mr Millar. This is very
important and I'm keen to hear it. I think we asked
people how long they wanted so we could sort out the
right amount of time. Rather than tried to shut people
down, we wanted to make sure that people had time to
develop the points they wanted to make, so make the
points you want to make.
MR MILLAR
Thank you.
We were at the point where you picked me up on the
observation, and it was simply that, that we haven't at
this point seen any proposals formulated by the Inquiry
or Parliament itself. What I was saying was it is
a matter of concern for us, and you wouldn't expect
anything otherwise.
Aidan Barclay put it bluntly in his oral evidence.
We don't want to destroy an industry through
overregulation. We have no idea whether a regulatory
system created following a statutory intervention might
create this risk, or even a risk of damage to if not
destruction of the industry and therefore collaterally
damage TMG.
In particular, we don't know whether we will end up
subject to regulatory burdens flowing from statutory
intervention which our future competitors on the
Internet will escape. These are likely increasingly to
be aggregators, especially the social media platforms,
and domiciled abroad.
We're having some difficulty envisaging a statutory
provision that can be drafted that will be effective in
bringing them, by matter of obligation, into
a regulatory fold. We don't imagine they would take
that lying down. But bringing them in consensually, as
the PressBoF proposals have suggested, is a completely
different matter.
So in those circumstances, we would say it's hardly
surprising, with respect, that the industry appears to
be almost unanimously supporting the PressBoF proposal,
and we would say that in these circumstances there is
a heavy onus on the Inquiry, if it is to recommend
statutory intervention in newspaper regulation, to show
why the PressBoF proposals will not ensure that the
shared mental assumptions and leadership aims in those
newsrooms that we're all concerned about change and
remain changed so as to avoid the problems the Inquiry
has identified.
We don't consider this has been shown or that it can
be, but the key point from our perspective is that the
industry will willingly commit to making these proposals
work. This is the best starting point for a new system
of regulation. No regulation through a mechanism about
which the industry, almost without exception, is
sceptical, has the same sort of chance of success.
Sir, those are my submissions.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you very much indeed,
Mr Millar.
Let's take a break now and then we'll carry on.
(3.18 pm)
(A short break)
(3.27 pm)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, Mr Dingemans.
Closing submissions by MR DINGEMANS
MR DINGEMANS
Sir, the aim of these closing submissions is
to supplement briefly the written submissions that have
already been filed on behalf of the Express and Star
newspapers and OK! Magazine.
May I make three short opening observations?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Certainly.
MR DINGEMANS
First, by emphasising the importance of
a free press, you, sir, have repeated and repeated again
your recognition of this fact, that it is a starting
point for any consideration of the matters engaged by
the Inquiry. It is not a point that needs to be
developed.
Secondly, we do respectfully submit that the
evidence has shown that there was no phone or computer
hacking carried out by the Daily or Sunday Express, the
Daily Star or the Daily Star Sunday or at OK! Magazine.
This is important, given the background against which
the Inquiry was established, but it is clear from the
terms of reference, the evidence and what you have said
that it does not begin and end there.
Thirdly, it is essentially common ground that the
vital importance of the press brings with it
responsibility and rights and obligations. A free press
can itself be held to account by criminal, civil and
regulatory law, and I will address further submissions
on those aspects.
May I turn first to the criminal law? There are
various statutes which regulate the behaviour of
journalists, and it is not necessary or appropriate to
say anything more about that now. But it is an
essential background against which considerations of
regulation need to be considered.
Secondly, civil law --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Before you pass from crime, would you
agree that for good and understandable reasons, it is
much, much more difficult to pursue a criminal
investigation against a newspaper or a journalist
because of the respect that is a consequence of
Article 10(2)?
MR DINGEMANS
Article 10(2) engages both civil, criminal
and regulatory law.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. But, for example, not naming
sources, the way in which the search powers are framed,
all make it much more difficult. That's the first
point.
The second point is that it requires a victim to be
not merely identified and identifiable, but to make
a complaint. And of course, as we've seen in the
context of a number of different aspects of the Inquiry,
that doesn't happen very often, because they don't know.
MR DINGEMANS
There is certainly the need to know before
you can complain. I entirely accept that. That's
a feature also of civil law and much of regulatory law.
If people don't know what's going on, they can hardly
complain in whatever sphere. But for obvious reasons
I'm not developing submissions about the criminal law.
And you, sir, have well in mind the importance of not
going unnecessarily beyond that which is required for
the purposes of proper regulation.
May I turn, then, to civil law and make briefly
a few points in relation to that?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DINGEMANS
We do submit a substantial vice in the area
of civil law relating to newspapers is the cost of
proceedings. This affects both those who wish to
complain and the newspapers.
The civil law can be an effective system for the
regulation of relationships, but only where it is
generally accessible. And you, sir, are well aware of
all the jurisprudence on Article 6 and there's no need
to develop it.
Any system providing for speedy, binding and final,
subject to appropriate appeals, resolutions would be
attractive to all those attempting to maintain the
appropriate balance. And it might be thought that an
important part of your recommendations, sir, should
engage issues of accessibility for those complaining
about newspaper conduct as well as cost for the
newspapers of those complaints.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
One of the things that I've
ventilated during the Inquiry is that a regulator should
have some arbitral arm which can do just that, and I'd
be interested to hear whether you have any submissions
on that, and in particular on the possibility that one
could recommend -- and I'm not there yet, but I'm
thinking about every possibility -- that if a newspaper
organ was not in the regulatory system that had the
arbitral arm, so that a complainant had to go to court
and incur costs, then cost shifting should operate in
a way that protected the victim, on the basis the
newspaper could sign up to a regime which would free it
of those costs.
MR DINGEMANS
Can I just address both of those?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DINGEMANS
We had put in written submissions, which we
didn't repeat, in relation to a tribunal system.
Obviously a system of arbitration depends on the consent
of both parties to be effective. And effectively it
seems that people, when they're talking about arbitral
systems, are talking really about a tribunal system.
Because of course, unless after the event both parties
give their consent, then it really adds nothing to the
current law as it exists.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Oh, I don't know, because if the
press have joined a system that provides a free and
speedy remedy, and the victim doesn't choose to go down
that route, then the costs system might work the other
way. If the press interest didn't sign up to the
system, then it would do so at its own cost.
MR DINGEMANS
So long as there was balance between the two.
One can see many advantages of a system that is speedy
and accessible. All the evidence that you have heard,
sir, from both sides suggest that costs is a real
barrier to effective complaints in civil proceedings,
and if there was any way to remove those barriers, which
avoided duplication -- the last thing one wants is --
and a complaint that was directed at the current system
is that people could make their complaints, go through
the regulatory system, and then use that really to
piggyback civil proceedings, whether that happens very
much or not.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, it was nobody suggesting that it
was a regulatory system in the end, now, whatever they
might have thought before.
MR DINGEMANS
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But I agree with your proposition if
you put it this way: it's very unhelpful only to be able
to go to court.
MR DINGEMANS
Yes. We do respectfully make that
submission, sir, and we do make the principal submission
that costs become a barrier not only to those that need
to complain but also to the newspapers that are dealing
with the complaints that are made against them.
May I mention briefly one other area of civil law,
and that's the law of privacy. I don't propose to
develop the very detailed submissions that have been put
in on the law of privacy and its development, but I hope
I can make this submission. Back in 1990, when
David Calcutt QC, to whom there's already been
reference, was appointed to head the departmental
committee into measures necessary to give protection to
individual privacy and whether statute was required,
that led to the 1991 establishment of the Press
Complaints Commission, but the failure to develop any
statutory law on privacy was then overtaken by, of
course, the jurisprudence incorporated by the Human
Rights Act in 1998, and it might be thought that when
you analysed the vast majority of the complaints before
you and consider the general nature of the culture,
ethics and practices of the press, that many of these
take place against a law of privacy which -- and it is a
failure of the law and has been acknowledged as such --
has been less than certain. Perhaps it is now beginning
to develop in a way that responsible journalists and
those advising consumers and those making complaints can
have some better idea of what the outcome is going to
be, but uncertainty in the law, particularly in this
area, has been a particular vice.
In that respect, of course, sir, you have to deal
with the fact of the different categories of people and
their approaches to privacy. I've set that out in
paragraph 9 of your written submissions, but in our
submission there are people who provide details of their
private life which others consider to be far too much
information, and that you can see from some of the
magazines and social media, and there are some people
who are happy and content with good press coverage, even
where it is intrusive, but are then very unhappy with
negative press coverage, particularly where it is
intrusive, and there are others who are very protective
about their privacy full stop and end of story, but
people don't always stay in those same categories, and
of course the difficulties of trying to identify that
have formed the backdrop to some of the cases before
you.
Can I then turn to regulation and start with the
principled aim of regulation. In our submission, the
most effective statement about regulatory intent was
said in relation to the regulation of lawyers, who are
also known to sin and fail, in Bolton v The Law Society,
and that is in 1994, 1 Weekly Law Reports, and that was
Lord Bingham in the Court of Appeal effectively setting
out the principled aim of regulation, and it is not to
punish, that can be an effect of regulation, and it is
not to compensate, that can be an effect of regulation;
it is to ensure that maintenance and indeed the
enhancement of standards in the regulated area.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think that's tremendously
important, because it's quite different. It isn't
sufficient to say, well, there's the criminal law or
there's the civil law.
MR DINGEMANS
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
There is something different.
MR DINGEMANS
They can overlap, and it would be an absurd
advocate who made the submission that they don't
overlap, but the principled aim of regulation is
different from both the criminal law and civil law, but
it has flip sides because people talk in terms of
regulators having substantial powers to fine, as if that
was in some ways a shortened form of the criminal law
and this was a more effective way of punishing
wrongdoing, that is again to miss the substantial point
of regulation.
Can I then turn to some bright lines we submit in
relation to regulation? First, there should be no
current editors on the regulatory body. This is an
industry which is still too small to enable persons to
be seen to be independent; whether they are or not is in
some respects not the thing, but to be seen to be
independent of the bodies which they are regulating. So
far as individual titles are concerned, and it's no
secret that those that I represent are not current
members of the PCC, it is again too small that
animosities or perceived animosities and loyalties or
perceived loyalties could undermine what could otherwise
be a proper functioning body.
Secondly, it is necessary to consider the scope of
regulation. Is it to govern printed media alone,
because we know that there are systems for regulation of
television and radio, and importantly, and my learned
friend Mr Millar has already dealt with this, is it to
extend to the Internet?
In News International's closing overview at
paragraph 35, they set out the Reuters report into
digital news and give the reference for that, and they
note that estimated 77 per cent of the UK population
uses the Internet -- so of course it's self-selecting in
that respect -- accesses the following news sources in
a week: online, 82 per cent; television, 76 per cent;
print, 54 per cent; and radio, 45 per cent. We do
respectfully submit that any system of regulation of the
printed media which excludes the Internet media is one
that is not going to be comprehensive.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right, let me just understand
what that means. Do you there mean to submit that there
ought to be a system devised that requires, mandates,
those that operate on the Internet to join, or do you
mean to suggest that you should devise a system that
encourages but does not compel, in other words, those to
join, because all you've said is that the system should
not exclude.
MR DINGEMANS
I do propose to develop that submission, but
to tell you where I go in that, and it's part predicated
in our written submissions, is this: we do respectfully
submit that given the comparative decline of print media
and what will be the increasing prominence of Internet
media, that any system of future regulation must be
comprehensive of all news media. Therefore, one is
likely to be in a situation where perhaps little points
apart, and we'll come to those, you are in a system of
voluntary regulation, and therefore you're in a system
whereby economic and real factors, being as important as
they are to decision-making, one is in a system whereby
you are encouraging persons to join a proper regulatory
body that has so many advantages to all that they will
become members of it.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You'll have to tell me what the
advantages are going to be for the Internet providers.
MR DINGEMANS
I'll --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Please.
MR DINGEMANS
-- come to those.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
In your own time, Mr Dingemans.
MR DINGEMANS
Yes. But in our submission, there are real
difficulties, and part of the difficulties in compelling
Internet providers -- those have been developed in other
submissions and I'm not going to repeat those, but the
real difficulties with compelling Internet providers of
news show that the need to ensure that there is not as
it were an imbalance of regulation become more
important.
Can I then just continue to address some other
bright lines for the regulatory body?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DINGEMANS
We respectfully submit that the regulatory
body must have the power to act on complaints, but also
the power to act on clients of its own notion. It might
be thought that a historic failing of the body was its
inability to act in response to other than formal
complaints.
We do also submit that the body should have the
power to deal with the relevant applicable standards,
for this principled reason, is that it draws a further
dividing line between any system of appointment of that
body, which may or may not, depending on your
recommendations and depending on legislative take-up,
take statutory involvement, and therefore, for example,
the Editors' Code, which has by and large seemed in the
evidence to have withstood much analysis, can be set by
that body.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Is your bright line about editors
sufficiently broad as to extend to objecting to their
involvement in the creation or at least the advice as to
the creation of a code?
MR DINGEMANS
No. Not in that sense. At the moment you
have a code which will continue, no doubt, to be
refined, but so far as the regulatory acting on
complaints and dealing with other matters, as you know,
the evidence why we're not current members of the PCC is
before you. And, sir, you may have summarised it
accurately when you pointed to personalities and
animosities, but that plainly wouldn't extend to the
aspect of drawing up the applicable standards, and there
are maybe advantages in that respect.
We also respectfully submit that there may be times
when an editor has had sufficient time away from the
industry so that there are no current loyalties or
animosities or indeed historic loyalties and
animosities, they might then become suitable, but that
would inevitably be a matter for the body appointing
those to be members of the new regulatory body.
Can I in that respect turn to our final bright line
for submission, and it is this: we do respectfully
submit that the constitutional significance of the free
press is such that the body appointing the persons to
the regulatory body should have protections equivalent
to those governing the appointment of Judicial
Appointments Commissioners. The judiciary has its own
constitutional importance in our society, and we do
respectfully submit that the press has a vital role to
play and that it is essential to put clear blue water
between Parliamentary bodies and the regulators. There
have been suggestions in the evidence that a headhunter
might be appointed to find the next people, and we do
respectfully submit that whilst the headhunter would no
doubt do a conscientious job, may in fact find the best
person for the appointment, there's none of the
transparency and systemic guarantees against
interference that are required in these areas.
In that respect, if you are in the slightest bit
interested to read about that, Baroness Prashar wrote an
interesting article about the current failings in the
system for the office for appointment of --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You mentioned that in paragraph 19 of
your submissions, but don't provide a reference.
MR DINGEMANS
Ah, I did provide it in my earlier
submissions, which is why I didn't provide another
reference.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right, then that's my fault.
MR DINGEMANS
No, no, I can well understand a desire not to
read the earlier submissions.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Oh no, no, I'm happy to read them,
but I didn't read them alongside these. I think I might
have read the paper, but I just want to check.
MR DINGEMANS
No, it is there. Effectively at the moment
there's still no guarantee of Nolan compliance
appointments. They have all been that, but there is not
statutory guarantee on that, and that was a matter on
which Baroness Prashar made a specific comment. But we
do respectfully submit that any system for appointment
to the new regulatory body ought to include the Nolan
guarantees by way of appointment.
Those were some distinct submissions in relation to
regulation.
So far as the line between whether it needs to be
statutory or should be voluntary, we do respectfully
submit that any principled system of tribunals or
arbitral tribunals, as you have suggested, may provide
their own incentives for that joinder by means of the
print media and indeed others. For example, you have
important publications, such as you've referred this
afternoon to Private Eye, standing outside the PCC
system, which has run its own campaigns about costs of
libel proceedings, which in itself might then consider
a new regulatory body with the cost-shifting principles
that you have referred to do have such advantages that
it might be worth joining.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. The reason I mentioned
Private Eye was because Mr Hislop's reasons for not
joining the PCC are very different from
Northern & Shell's reasons for leaving, are themselves
principled, and understandable in the context of the
work that Private Eye does.
MR DINGEMANS
Yes. He could hardly publish Street of Shame
each week and then expect to be in front of them the
week after.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
(Nods head)
MR DINGEMANS
We do respectfully submit that if you deal
with that aspect by ensuring credible public
appointments to the regulatory body and then put in
proper systems for incentivised joining for the bodies
that are carrying out the printing, whether on the
Internet or by way of print media, then there may be
developments in that respect.
As far as the --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But what I couldn't ever cope with
there is somebody who's deliberately placed themselves
outside the jurisdiction, but then no system, either of
civil law or regulation, would capture them unless they
want to come into it.
MR DINGEMANS
No system of criminal, civil or regulatory
law would catch them, no, sir, and in those
circumstances, ensuring that you have a voluntary system
which is attractive to all -- for the proper reasons,
not because they'll then just make decisions in their
own favour, but attractive to all the relevant parties,
we do respectfully submit is something that would be
a proper way to go forward.
May I finish in the six minutes I have remaining --
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Dingemans, we asked how long
everybody wanted, as I said to Mr Millar. You take the
time that you want to to develop your views. They are
very, very important, because Northern & Shell are
different to many of the other core participants because
they have a very different view of regulation, for
whatever reason, so don't worry about the time.
MR DINGEMANS
Well, I still intend to be six minutes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right.
MR DINGEMANS
It was just to address, sir, your questions
on culture, practices and ethics of the press and some
suggestions for consideration, and we do respectfully
submit that they are no more nor less than that.
The first is this: it is notable that in British
print journalism there is a general and absolute
fearlessness on the part of journalists of politicians,
so journalists do not fear politicians, and that is
a remarkable feature of journalism in this jurisdiction,
and something that necessarily falls to be preserved.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
What about the converse?
MR DINGEMANS
I hadn't proposed -- I had seven
propositions. I wasn't going to deal with the
politicians' views.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But, you see, it is actually
important, isn't it?
MR DINGEMANS
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right.
MR DINGEMANS
Because plainly the relationships between
press and politicians are relevant, but if you are
looking for one to fear the other, given the power that
is held -- the legislative power that is held by
politicians and the executive power that is held by
politicians, we do respectfully submit that it is a much
better society that has the press fearless of
politicians than the press fearful of politicians.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I would like them neither to be
fearful of the other, but each to recognise that the
other is doing an important job in our democracy. Or is
that too much to hope for?
MR DINGEMANS
I suspect, sir, you would find that in the
evidence before you.
Can I turn to the second proposition?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DINGEMANS
This comes from the evidence of some of the
editors and journalists that gave evidence before you,
which was that they do genuinely have a relentless
desire to communicate the news as they see it.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DINGEMANS
Thirdly, they do have a sensitivity to their
own readers' opinions, but it might be thought a general
insensitivity to public opinion. That may be a good or
a bad thing, but we respectfully submit it's established
on the evidence.
Fourthly, the evidence shows that they have
a tendency to see news as divorced from the individuals
involved.
Fifthly, in some areas, there has been shown
a stunning lack of judgment to the extent that it might
engage the criminal law, and I say no more about that;
about where lines can properly be drawn between the
public interest in acquiring news and privacy.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Would it be fair -- and I don't
require you to answer this question, Mr Dingemans, if
you don't want to, but just thinking about your last two
points, and putting them together to say that it's
possible that that combination explains what happened in
relation to Mr Jefferies.
MR DINGEMANS
Indeed, sir. Inevitably, because they are
skilled, they've been trained to deal with news, but
aspects of the training, you might have thought that
some aspects of the academic aspects of the training
still don't necessarily deal with the fact that there
are individuals at the end of a news story and in some
respects you have to understand that the journalist
can't stop printing the news because of those personal
aspects, but when one looks at the example of
Mr Jefferies, to the extent that it even engaged the
criminal law of contempt, or civil criminal law of
contempt, that there was a stunning lack of judgment in
some of the newspaper coverage.
We have respectfully submitted that the Attorney's
current use of the laws of contempt, which have existed
and continue to exist, is something to be commended.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DINGEMANS
The sixth proposition was this, that the
evidence shows that those proprietors and senior members
of the profession have a strong continuing desire to
exist by making a profit.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR DINGEMANS
And seventhly, and it may explain some of the
stories where people have thought that a factual
background exists and gone to print too early, there is
a desire to be a step ahead of other publications.
Those were seven general propositions. I'm sorry
they're not fact-specific, but I hope you'll forgive me
for not making them fact-specific, for your
consideration.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, that's a very interesting
analysis. I think I can think of lots of examples of
almost every single one.
MR DINGEMANS
I'm very grateful. Those are my submissions.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you.
Right. Well, we have a rather longer day tomorrow
than we would have had, but so be it. Thank you very
much. Tomorrow morning, 10 o'clock.
(4.00 pm)
(The hearing adjourned until 10 o'clock the following day)