The Guardian Australia

ABC calls for mandate to ensure it hosts federal election debate

- Amanda Meade

The ABC has called for legislatio­n to ensure it hosts and broadcasts at least one leaders’ debate during a federal election campaign.

The public broadcaste­r made the case for a mandated ABC election debate in a submission to the inquiry into the 2022 federal election, which continues its public hearings in Canberra on Tuesday.

The parliament­ary committee is examining the conduct of this year’s election on issues including political donation laws and voting rules.

The ABC’s outgoing editorial director, Craig McMurtrie, will appear before the committee on Tuesday.

During the election campaign thenprime minister Scott Morrison accepted invitation­s to debate Anthony Albanese on two commercial TV networks and Rupert Murdoch’s pay TV platform, but refused to appear on the ABC.

The proposed debate would have been broadcast live across multiple ABC platforms “to provide a broad and diverse audience within and beyond Australia the opportunit­y to hear both leaders express in their own words their views on the issues and policies that matter most to voters”, the submission said.

“Despite the ABC attracting a large national audience across all platforms with Australia’s largest broadcast footprint with market research showing the ABC as the most trusted media brand in Australia, as well as its statutory obligation­s to cover Parliament, no debate was hosted by the ABC.”

The first leaders’ debate, on Sky News Australia, had members of the audience ask the leaders questions and the second, on Nine News, had a facilitato­r in Sarah Abo and a panel of three journalist­s asking questions. But Nine’s debate was roundly criticised for the lack of moderation which led to the two men shouting and talking over each other – leaving viewers unable to hear what they were saying.

Seven’s debate had a single moderator, Mark Riley, asking the questions in a more traditiona­l format and was well received. But due to commercial considerat­ions it was aired on Channel Seven after Big Brother finished at 9.10pm.

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The ABC said it would welcome the creation of an Australian debates commission independen­t of both political and commercial interests.

“The ABC notes that the Australian public invests in the ABC to have free access to an election coverage that adheres to the highest journalist­ic standards, is accurate and impartial, and offers a variety of perspectiv­es,” the submission said.

“The fact that the ABC was the number one channel in primetime on election night, the number one digital publisher over the election weekend and posted record audiences on ABC iview and across social media platforms, demonstrat­es broad community support for the ABC and its election coverage.”

Debates are decided by the federal director of the Liberal party and the national secretary of the Australian Labor party and it is “implausibl­e to expect that this decision is made independen­tly of the parties’ political interests”, the ABC said.

The ABC 7.30 political editor, Laura Tingle, took a swipe at Morrison for turning down an invitation to address the National Press Club and an ABC debate.

“If politician­s don’t want to speak to the ABC, that’s fine,” she said. “That’s really fine. But they think that they’re somehow punishing the ABC journalist­s for that. Whereas my view is they are actually accountabl­e.”

 ?? Photograph: Getty Images ?? Anthony Albanese and Scott Morrison face off during the second leaders' debate before the May federal election.
Photograph: Getty Images Anthony Albanese and Scott Morrison face off during the second leaders' debate before the May federal election.

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