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Blunkett and Coe urge self-regulation of press as Leveson report due

News: Local, national and international news 24-hours a day.

News: Local, national and international news 24-hours a day.

LORD Justice Leveson is today due to publish his report on whether the press should be subject of statutory regulation in the wake of the phone hacking scandal.

But Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough MP and Lord Coe, chairman of the London 2012 organisers and who grew up in the city have backed a letter urging a new system of ‘self regulation’.

The letter, signed by MPs of all parties, reads: “As parliamentarians, we believe in free speech and are opposed to the imposition of any form of statutory control even if it is dressed up as underpinning. It is redress that is vital, not broader regulation.

“The prospect of drafting legislation may have the dual benefit of exposing the dangers of statutory regulation and at the same time focus the minds of those seeking to further strengthen the existing tough independent proposals.

“No form of statutory regulation of the press would be possible without the imposition of state licensing – abolished in Britain in 1695. State licensing is inimical to any idea of press freedom and would radically alter the balance of our unwritten constitution. There are also serious concerns that statutory regulation of the print media may shift the balance to the digital platforms which, as recent events have shown through the fiasco of Newsnight-Twitter, would further undermine the position of properly moderated and edited print journalism.

“The press abuse chronicled at Leveson was almost wholly about actions which were against the law. It demonstrated not a sole failure of regulation but rather of law enforcement. However, the status quo is not an option. We cannot countenance newspapers behaving as some have in the past. The solution is not new laws but a profound restructuring of the self-regulatory system.

“Lords Hunt and Black have come forward with a detailed proposal for a much improved, genuinely independent regulator with the power to intervene proactively, to levy substantial fines, and to enforce membership for the first time through a system of civil contracts. They need to deliver on this promised reform.

“We agree with the report of the joint parliamentary committee which came out against any form of statutory regulation – not least because of the signal it would send to emerging democracies around the world.

“Public debate will necessarily follow publication of the Leveson report and will be needed to provide confidence in a rigorous tough new system of self-regulation. Such a debate will lead to a speedy way of establishing a new self-regulatory regime that can restore confidence in the press.

■ What do you think? Email letters@thestar.co.uk, or write to The Star, York Street, Sheffield, S1 1PU. Follow local reaction to the Leveson report’s publication at www.thestar.co.uk or on our Twitter site #StarLeveson.

 

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