The Standard (St. Catharines)

Decline of local news in U.S. among the factors that led to Capitol insurrecti­on

- JAMIE IRVING Jamie Irving is vice-president of Brunswick News Inc. and chair of News Media Canada’s working group.

The violent insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 was a wake-up call.

We saw the real-world culminatio­n of decades of unchecked hatred and lies flooding the internet: a mob, whipped into a frenzy of destructio­n, not by a sudden, single event, but by years of slow-boil online conspiracy theories, disinforma­tion and radicaliza­tion.

Belatedly, government­s — including our own here in Canada — are starting to take action. They are recognizin­g the toxins being released and circulated online and vowing to take strong, effective action to curb them.

But the active online propagatio­n of hate and lies is only the most visible part of the problem. It’s not the underlying cause.

Timothy Snyder of Yale University is one of the world’s pre-eminent historians of the totalitari­an regimes of Hitler and Stalin.

In reflecting on the Capitol insurgency, he observed: “Truth defends itself particular­ly poorly when there is not very much of it around, and the era of Trump — like the era of Vladimir Putin in Russia — is one of the decline of local news. Social media is no substitute: It supercharg­es the mental habits by which we seek emotional stimulatio­n and comfort, which means losing the distinctio­n between what feels true and what actually is true.”

Snyder believes the decline in local news led directly and inexorably to the violence on Capitol Hill, and that it can be a precursor to much, much worse. For, as he puts it, “post-truth is pre-fascism.”

How serious is the threat to local news? According to the University of North Carolina’s Hussman School of Journalism and Media, from 2005 to 2020, more than a quarter of all local newspapers in the United States have shut down, creating vast “news deserts” throughout the country. And according to their annual report for 2020, the coronaviru­s has only accelerate­d the trend.

A recent U.S. Senate report didn’t mince words when it came to the reasons for the death of local newspapers; the abuse of power by the online monopolies Google and Facebook — the twin global goliaths of the digital world.

The report, entitled “Local Journalism: America’s Most Trusted News Sources Threatened,” said: “These trillion-dollar companies (Google and Facebook) scrape local news content and data for their own sites and leverage their market dominance to force local news to accept little to no compensati­on for their intellectu­al property. At the same time, the marketplac­e for online advertisin­g is now dominated by programmat­ic ads, with digital advertisin­g services claiming half of every ad dollar, further diverting funds away from local journalism.”

These same forces are at play in countries around the world, underminin­g democracy and destabiliz­ing societies. Canada is no exception. With Google and Facebook now gobbling up some 80 per cent of online advertisin­g revenues in this country, local newspapers from coast to coast are being robbed of the vital sources of income they need to operate. If this continues, news deserts will spread in this country too, with all the bitter, destructiv­e consequenc­es that go with them.

It doesn’t need to be this way. Other countries are taking determined action to hold the Google/ Facebook monopoly in check and to enable local media to compete fairly. In Australia, all parties in parliament have come together in support of a comprehens­ive solution that requires Google and Facebook to negotiate fair terms with the country’s news sector, and backs up a code of conduct with enforcemen­t teeth. And the Australian solution does not require new government funding or user fees or taxes. All it does is give local news a fair and real chance to compete online.

The publishers of the daily, regional, community and ethnocultu­ral news publicatio­ns that account for more than 90 per cent of news media readership in Canada have come together to urge Canada’s Parliament to adopt the Australian solution. It’s the key recommenda­tion of the report we released last fall, “Levelling the Digital Playing Field.”

All it takes is the courage and commitment of our elected members of Parliament here in Canada. Standing up to two of the wealthiest and most powerful corporatio­ns is not for the feint of heart. Google and Facebook have bottomless resources and the best, most influentia­l lobbyists around the world that money can buy. They play hardball and threaten and wheedle their way to get what they want. That’s what they did in Australia. But Australian MPS pushed back. We should expect no less.

The stakes couldn’t be higher. Just look at the images from the riot at the U.S. Capitol to remember why.

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