From Jordan Williams <[email protected]>
Subject U-turn alert: National & NZ First want to bailout the media (again...)
Date July 5, 2024 10:22 PM
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Hi Friend,

This week the Government dropped another policy bombshell.

The Minister for Media and Communities, Paul Goldsmith, announced that National and New Zealand First have U-turned and are now supporting Willie Jackson’s Bill to tax internet companies and give the media a bail out.

ACT stuck to their pre-election position and "agreed to disagree" by confirming they're still not backing the Bill.

That means Mr Goldsmith will need to rely on Labour or Green MPs to get the media bailout over the line. You really couldn’t make it up.

I'm reaching out, Friend, to ask you to take 60 seconds to email Mr Goldsmith, Mr Luxon, and Mr Peters to tell them to scrap this media bailout. <[link removed]>

"Both unprincipled and stupid" 🤯

National's own pollster (and former Taxpayers' Union board member) David Farrar, didn't mince his words. He described the the U-turn as "both an unprincipled and a stupid decision". 



Here's how David summed it up on Kiwiblog <[link removed]>:

This is both an unprincipled and a stupid decision. I can handle principled stupid decisions and even unprincipled smart decisions but this is neither.

It is unprincipled because it is forcing successful companies in one industry (social networks and search engines) to fund failing companies in another industry (media). The only rationale for this is that Google and Meta have money and Stuff doesn’t. Will we see Netflix levied money to fund home video rental stores? Will we see Foodstuffs levied money to find Whitcoulls?

It is also a very stupid decision. Most media is already left leaning as most journalist have a left worldview. The Government is going to pass a law to fund a media that will oppose almost everything that supporters of the Government believe in. Even worse, it will set up a structural incentive for the media to become even more left leaning. Let’s say the Government forces Meta and Google to hand over $20 million a year to local media. Well Labour and Greens next election will insist that levy be doubled to $40 million, and of course that will create an institutional bias in favour of the parties that will benefit media the most. And Te Pati Maori will no doubt insist 50% of the left go to Maori media companies.

It is also very possible that the proposed law will fail, in that Meta will simply block all NZ news links rather than be forced to pay a levy.

A charter to peddle influence? 💣

Mr Goldsmith has made few changes to the Bill. But National's changes make it even worse than the Willie Jackson version!

First, Mr Goldsmith proposes that the responsible Minister will be able “to decide which digital platforms are captured by the bill”. Paul Goldsmith says this is “to manage unintended consequences” and which media outlets will get the money. 

You might be with the current Government having the power to choose which media get funded, but we also remember the "public interest journalism fund" and the fishhooks about media needing to toe the line on the "partnership" neotribalism interpretation of the Treaty of Waitangi. 

How will you feel when Labour are back in power and Willie Jackson, Chris Hipkins, or Chlöe Swarbrick will decide what media outlets get how much?

Once through, this will be a hard one to unpick and repeal. That's why we're asking our supporters to take 60 seconds right now to email the key decision makers. <[link removed]>

<[link removed]>

Trust in news is at an all time low: Bailing them out will make it worse 📉

New Zealand's media no longer reflect the breadth of public opinion. According to polling, Kiwis perceive the major news outlets (Stuff, One News, Newshub and Radio NZ) to be Left-leaning with the NZ Herald being the only outlet people thought was broadly neutral. <[link removed]>

And that shouldn’t come as any surprise given how New Zealand’s journalists identify themselves politically. Massey University research reveals that 81 percent of Kiwi journalists consider themselves centre-Left or Left-wing while just 15 percent said they are on the Right. <[link removed]> That’s a ratio of more than five-to-one (while the general population are split roughly down the middle).

And that’s a big factor in why trust in media is at an all time low. The latest figures out earlier this year showed that just one in three Kiwis said they trusted the news “most of the time”. <[link removed]>

But instead of self reflecting, or the market correcting the imbalance, the media have hoodwinked the new Government into giving them a permanent bailout. Will you email the decision makers in the Beehive to ask them not to do it? <[link removed]>

And it won't even work... 🤦

When a similar scheme was tried in Canada, Facebook simply removed news from its platform entirely. That’s a lose, lose for everyone. And Australia is heading in the same direction. 

If it passes, the Bill would particularly hit small news outlets like The Platform or Chris Lynch Media in Christchurch that rely on promoting their news content through social media platforms like Facebook.

Friend, make no mistake, this U-turn by National isn't about helping small, contrarian, local news companies. It's a cave in to the owners of outfits like Stuff and the far-Left 'Spinoff' website.

The National Party were elected to kill this bill – now they're cuddling it 🧸

National absolutely slammed Labour when Willie Jackson was trying to pass the same regime (the speeches to Parliament are here <[link removed]>)

Melissa Lee (who was the Broadcastings Spokesperson) summed it up:



They were right to oppose the Bill then, so what's changed?

Our senior National Party sources in the Beehive tell us that the charge of heart is from none other than the Prime Minister himself. We hear, that he feels he must pass the Bill to curry favour with the mainstream media. 

Do you think it will work, Friend? And is it worth the cost of having the media reliant on a Ministerial funding scheme?

Let Paul Goldsmith, Christopher Luxon & Winston Peters know what you think 📣

Friend, we know for a fact that even within the Cabinet, there is disgust at this decision. There is still time for National (or NZ First?) to backtrack on the U-turn.

I’m asking you to join me in sending a note to Paul Goldsmith, Christopher Luxon, and Winston Peters to let them know that they have got this one wrong. <[link removed]>

Ask them to consign Willie Jackson’s Fair Digital News Bargaining Bill to the political scrapheap and not bailout the media, yet again.

➡️  <[link removed]>➡️  <[link removed]>➡️  <[link removed]> <[link removed]>Email the decision makers <[link removed]>

We need to knock Labour-like policies like these on the head now before we get a Government continuing the policy platform of Jacinda Ardern and Willie Jackson.

Thank you for your support.


Jordan Williams
Executive Director
New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union

Ps. We've made emailing the key decision makers – Minister Paul Goldsmith, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, and Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters as easy as a few clicks. Take 60 seconds to make your views known here. <[link removed]>



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