Cape Times

Press Club’s ‘blatant bias’

- Francesca Villette

PARLIAMENT­ARY journalist Joylene van Wyk, who recently resigned in protest from the Cape Town Press Club, said the club’s all-white committee was heavily biased in favour of The Cape Messenger, with its editor and other stakeholde­rs on the committee.

“The new committee has not been transparen­t in what they want to do with the Cape Town Press Club. They have not said why it is so important that half of the eight-person committee are linked to one venture (that has now been deferred temporaril­y). One can only surmise that they want to take the Cape Town Press Club in a commercial direction; this is not why it was establishe­d,” said Van Wyk, the club’s first black co-chairperso­n.

The Cape Town Press Club recently came under fire from Van Wyk and parliament­ary communicat­ion services division manager Moloto Mothapo for its all-white, predominan­tly male committee, with Mothapo saying the club had reverted “to its old pre-1994 self ”.

Van Wyk penned in a published letter that during a committee meeting held about two months before the club’s AGM, now club chairman Brent Meersman told the committee that Donwald Pressly, who had previously been dismissed by Independen­t Media following an internal disciplina­ry process over his conduct in 2014, would not stand as a candidate for any committee position.

Regarding the accusation around The Cape Messenger, Meersman said: “Alarmed by Van Wyk’s accusation, as soon as the new committee met my first order of business was to ask the eight other committee members to declare any interests they might have in The Cape Messenger.

“As the minutes recorded then and subsequent­ly approved reflect as follows: Pressly said he was an editor; one member had a 1/100th share, and one member’s reporting is used by the Messenger from time to time. That is the extent of it,” Meersman said.

THE Cape Town Press Club has become a classic case of how an organisati­on with a long and proud history can be captured by an ambitious minority membership. The big question is what do they want to use the club for?

Founded in 1976, the club is the oldest organisati­on of its kind in the country, with the main objective of bringing members of the media together for a lunch to network and engage with interestin­g and newsworthy speakers. It was formed at a time when the country operated under a hierarchic­al system and the club served to cut through the red tape and other obstacles faced by journalist­s to report or question those in power. It served that purpose well. During the 1970s, 1980s and the early 1990s, whenever the club had a meeting the editors of the major newspapers would attend so they could sit at the main table to know and network with the speaker of the day.

But the world has changed. South Africa has transition­ed into a constituti­onal democracy. The advent of social media and the re-modelling of the media landscape caused significan­t changes in the behaviour and manner of journalism praxis.

The lack of transforma­tion at the club was not just about race, or gender, but also coming to terms with overall transforma­tion. Reporters literally have to write and publish more with less.

The push in these times for immediate breaking news means organisati­ons like the Cape Town Press Club do not feature as part of a working reporter’s tool box.

When I joined the club, I was also on the committee of the Parliament­ary Press Gallery Associatio­n and saw the potential of the two organisati­ons working together to afford journalist­s the opportunit­y to get better access to news makers.

My reason for leaving the club arose over the manipulati­on that manifested itself at its most recent annual general meeting (AGM), and the manner in which the current committee has behaved since then.

The issue started with the appointmen­t of Donwald Pressly as the secretary in 2015 after he lost his job with Independen­t Media. The post he held was the only paid one as it involves significan­t time spent in administra­tion and in support of the executive committee. It is an employee position with no voting rights.

The secretary, who attends committee meetings, ultimately does what the committee decides, regardless whether he or she agrees. This is normal practice for organisati­ons such as the Press Club, a voluntary organisati­on.

Pressly’s appointmen­t was approved following his proposal that, as a past chairperso­n and long-standing member, he “best knows” how the club functions. A sub-committee of which I was part was formed to examine the proposal. I supported his appointmen­t because I believed he could do the job and would serve the interests of the club and its members. The committee agreed to the appointmen­t, but it was not unanimous and led to the resignatio­n of one committee member.

At first all was good and well. However, I felt that Pressly increasing­ly confused his role as a paid employee with that of a committee member.

Other aspects of his conduct also started raising red flags. The real breaking point came when I was asked by Parliament to help inform journalist­s of the Press Club about a report-back by the legislatur­e. I consulted other committee members because it is practice not to advertise non-Press Club events, but not a policy

Although I obtained the agreement of my then-co-chair Brent Meersman and other committee members to go ahead with the engagement with Parliament, Pressly flatly refused to assist.

When I asked him to do so on the committee WhatsApp group he went on a rant against me over a period of six hours, necessitat­ing the interventi­on of two other committee members to get him to stop.

The Press Club WhatsApp conversati­on, or rant, against me, was then leaked to Parliament. The leaked conversati­on, particular­ly Pressly’s comments, brought the club into disrepute and the sharp end of criticism by Parliament, which issued a statement in November 2017, raising its concern about the “vitriolic attacks” by Pressly on the presiding officers.

How that WhatsAspp conversati­on was leaked, I don’t know.

The Cape Town Press Club is not immune from such a situation and as a point of principle has always operated in an atmosphere of transparen­cy, just as it demands from those who are in power in government and in business.

I was present at the meeting requested by members of the club outside the committee to mediate a solution on Pressly’s future. The result was a proposal that Pressly would resign as secretary with at least four months’ pay, but he would retain his membership.

In terms of the club’s constititi­on and practice, this proposal had to be formally adopted and approved by the committee. This was done and Pressly resigned as secretary in January.

Unknown to some in the previous committee was that there has been intense behind-the-scenes lobbying in the months since. The aim of Pressly and his grouping was clearly to control the club again. This was done by sleight of hand, and not in keeping with the club’s practices that, for example, include giving notice of intention to stand for a committee position. By a careful reading the constituti­on the whole election coup of Pressly was unconstitu­tional.

To the surprise of some previous committee members, on the day of the AGM there was a long list of new candidates, led by Pressly. The AGM sanctioned Pressly’s list of candidates, as Meersman informed the outgoing committee there could be no nomination­s from the floor.

I would like to point out that Ed Herbst, in his opinion piece – “A fake news attack on the Cape Town Press Club”, dated August 24 – comes to a wrong and utterly disturbing conclusion (which according to Herbst was approved by Meersman and Pressly): “Speaking for myself what I, rightly or wrongly, glean from this is that Van Wyk served happily on the committee of the Cape Town Press Club until it was pointed out to her that she was no longer eligible for appointmen­t to it because, not having paid her subs for two years, she was no longer a member in good standing,” he wrote.

This is incorrect as I was a member of good standing at the time of the AGM and I met all the requiremen­ts in terms of the clubs rules to be nominated from the floor.

And so Pressly and his allies were elected unopposed.

The result is an all-white committee that is heavily biased in favour of the Cape Messenger, with its editor and other stakeholde­rs on the committee of the club. The new committee has not been transparen­t in what it wants to do with the Cape Town Press Club.

Van Wyk is the former co-chairperso­n of the Cape Town Press Club and is parliament­ary correspond­ent for Landbouwee­kblad. She writes this in her personal capacity.

 ??  ?? JOYLENE VAN WYK
JOYLENE VAN WYK
 ??  ?? ED HERBST
ED HERBST
 ??  ?? DONWALD PRESSLY
DONWALD PRESSLY
 ??  ?? QUIT: A ragout from the Cape Times of August 13 about the resignatio­n of Joylene van Wyk as a member of the Cape Town Press Club.
QUIT: A ragout from the Cape Times of August 13 about the resignatio­n of Joylene van Wyk as a member of the Cape Town Press Club.

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