Hi Friend,
I
missed this email last week from the Taxpayers' Union, and I wanted to
make sure you had seen it too.
I
have seen the way media managers get bullied by their own increasingly
more "woke" leftwing newsrooms.
I
believe in this idea from the Taxpayers' Union to prevent Government
subsidies from turning down paid advertising on political grounds.
This Bill would change the conversations in our media companies. It’s
crucial that we fight for a more balanced media
landscape.
This
Bill will ensure media outlets that are in some part funded by
taxpayer dollars to become common carriers. This means they would
share advertising without policing or altering it.
I've
just chipped in to fund this campaign, and I hope you will
too.
Peter
Williams (Former Broadcaster and long-time supporter of
the Taxpayers’ Union)
From: Jordan
Williams Date: Thursday, 15 August
2024 at 4:34PM Subject: Media companies
now censoring political advertising
Hi Friend,
This note is longer than usual, but a really important issue to do
with the Taxpayers' Union's ability to do its job and communicate with
the public.
I know a lot of New Zealanders are concerned about media 'bias' or
capture. It's become clear that it's now affecting not just newsrooms,
but the advertising arms of our large media companies – almost all of
whom take taxpayer money. We
think the only solution is a Parliamentary Bill to stop editorial
preference being applied to paid advocacy or political advertising. We
are fundraising so we can instruct our lawyers to draft a bill and to
campaign for MPs to pass it.
They went for Hobson's Pledge, now
the Taxpayers' Union is having ads censored
As a result of the brouhaha about the "one law for all" group,
Hobson's Pledge, placing an advertisement in the NZ Herald,
the ability of the
Taxpayers' Union to book advertising with NZ's largest newspaper
company – and speak directly to the public on matters the media aren't
necessarily covering – is under threat.
In
case you missed it, the background to the Hobson's Pledge matter is
covered by Radio NZ here. They placed an advert which caused Te
Pāti Māori and some academics to go berserk.
The merits of the advert/policy debate in their ad aren't the
purpose of this email. The beach ownership issue isn't in our
wheelhouse of taxes, spending, and accountability.
But my heart sunk when the Taxpayers' Union received an email
yesterday from NZME (the owners of the NZ Herald) when we asked what
spaces were available for tomorrow's NZ Herald and Saturday's Weekend
Herald.
We were told:
"we are currently reviewing our
policy regarding Advocacy advertising. As such, the previous policy
with booking in, and then legal reviewing material etc. is also under
review.
In the first instance, if we could please
have an indication of content and creative of your advert [...] before we could book
anything in."
Basically, what NZME now want to do is screen every
advert before they will even tell us what slots are
available and/or the price.
The media already cherrypicks who
you can hear from in reporting. Now they want to cherrypick what paying advertisers are
allowed to say.
Friend, as you
know, newsrooms simply won't cover some issues. The safeguard is the
ability to buy advertising space and speak directly to the public. But
even that is now under threat.
Recall that in the early days of our Three Waters campaign neither
the media (nor the politicians) would touch it with a barge pole. Paid
advertising allowed us to force the issue onto the public agenda.
Applying editorial discretion to political/advocacy advertisements
seriously undermines the Taxpayers' Union's ability to be
effective.
It's also hypocritical of NZME. They don't editorialise the ads for
classifieds (including for brothels!) on page 15, but are now
demanding to do so for advocacy groups wanting to advertise on page
5.
Remember, all of our adverts go past lawyers before they are
published (to make sure we can justify claims made and that we are
complying with advertising standards). Now, NZME want to screen them
before they'll even offer bookings.
We do not think it's right to be forced to negotiate with media on
what is and isn't appropriate for print – so long as it is based in
evidence and fact. If
you agree, help us fight back and ensure NZME's management see the
error in their ways.
The real problem
is that the media are allowing themselves to be
bullied. By announcing that they are now screening adverts, they
will make the problem ten times worse!
Instead of
rejecting the online outrage mob, NZME are emboldening the
censors.
The practical implications for our
work fighting for taxpayers
Here at the Taxpayers' Union, we always want to ensure our donors'
money goes as far as possible. We often pick up last minute full page
or premium advertising spots going cheap.
You will have seen this in our emails where we need [x] amount to
fund a particular advert in a tight deadline. We can do that as,
unlike the big corporates, we can (and do!) turn around advertising
creative very quickly.
Occasionally, we have to make small changes based on lawyers'
feedback – which we seldom complain about – but by then we already
have space/placements locked in.
Under this this new policy (which they have implemented, despite
just saying it's a 'review'), NZME are no longer willing to tell us
what advertising slots are even available.
With no
transparency on what these new standards are or how they will be
applied, it appears NZME just want discretion on what to offer (and
for how much) depending on the content.
The "Public Interest Journalism
Fund" strikes again?
NZME were the
largest beneficiaries of the so-called "Public Interest Journalism
Fund".
Its $6.9 million
is more than double what TVNZ and TV3/Discovery
took!
We say that if
media take funding from the taxpayer, they should be required to run
political advocacy ads without selection or bias.
NZME are also set to be big winners under the new "Fair
Digital News Bargaining Bill" which was originally Willie Jackson's
bill. It was slammed by National when they were in Opposition, but has
now been picked up by Paul Goldsmith and the National-led
Government.
We need to push back and ensure that
media taking public money can't also pick and choose who can run paid
adverts.
Friend, if we cannot make the media change their tune now, imagine
how difficult it will be at the next election when there is an
empowered Labour/Green/TPM potential coalition!
But we're in a tricky position. The Taxpayers' Union cannot
bite the hand that feeds us: our ability to advocate for taxpayers
includes being able to reliably get issues into the media.
But on the other hand, if NZME's new approach is left to
stand, we will be boxed-in to only being able to advertise on issues
the editors (or the online mob) deem acceptable. We
cannot let that stand.
Friend, the team spent this morning strategising about the
best way forward. We can't 'go to war' with the media without
jeopardising our effectiveness in working with the media to
expose government waste and promote transparency.
We've
come up with a solution, but we need your backing to pull it
off...
Will you support an Advertising
(Anti-Discrimination for Publicly-funded Media) Bill?
I think most would agree that private media companies should
be able to accept or reject any advertisement they want. The problem
here is that NZME both claims poverty (and takes millions of
taxpayer's money) but then rejects other sources of revenue (i.e.
advertising) because of editorial or political preference.
And it's not just NZME. Stuff are guilty of the same, and
even Allied Press (the publishers of the Otago Daily Times). NZME have
tended to be the staunchest in standing up to the outrage mob (until
now, that is).
If we can raise
the funds, we will have our lawyers draft a Parliamentary bill to
require media companies that take taxpayer money not to discriminate
or turn down paid advertising on the basis of political or editorial
preference.
The Bill would be suitable for either the Government to adopt, or
any backbench MP to sponsor as a member's bill.
Of course advertisements that are dishonest, misleading, or
otherwise breach advertising standards wouldn't be protected. But it
would mean that editors could not buckle to public pressure (or apply
their own newsroom's political preferences) to pick and choose who
gets a voice.
In effect,
it would require those media outlets operating on the public purse to
be "common carriers" for advertisers.
Those companies that don't take taxpayer handouts would be
unaffected.
If
you agree this law is needed, chip-in to make it
happen.
With your support, we can ensure a
Parliamentary Bill is ready to go.
Friend, our Three Waters Bill was bigger than Ben Hur but (so far
at least) the Government has adopted all of our key provisions.
We've done it before, and can do it again! Without the Taxpayers'
Union to lead this, no one will fix the problem.
>>
Click here to sponsor a Bill and campaign to stop media companies
censoring adverts.
Are the Government really going to vote down a Bill that requires
media to be fair?
Your
support will make it possible.
Thank you for your support,
|
Jordan
Williams Executive Director New Zealand Taxpayers’
Union
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ps.
Every dollar donated on this page will be used to fight for a more
balanced media landscape. Will you chip in and make this
happen?
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