The Scotsman

More serious threats to press than awful SNP broadcast

Comment John Mclellan

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Of all the threats to freedom of expression in Scotland just now, the awful SNP party political broadcast supposedly lampooning columnist and author David Torrance isn’t one of them.

The allegation is that Torrance has been singled out for treatment because of his criticism of the SNP. Presumably the row has also meant a lot more people will have seen the broadcast, too, not necessaril­y a good thing in this case. Liberal Democrat MSP Alex Cole-hamilton has condemned the broadcast in a motion to the Scottish Parliament which says that “for a governing party to appear to mock a journalist in such a way, using a free broadcast on public service television, and thereby inviting its supporters to do so, represents a dangerous challenge to freedom of the press”.

This is ironic because Cole-hamilton’s party is backing a campaign to force legislatio­n through Westminste­r that is a much greater danger to press freedom. Labour and Lib Dem peers support an amendment to the Data Protection Bill by Conservati­ve peer Lord Atlee, designed to trigger a system in which media companies being sued in the civil courts over data misuse could be compelled to pay both sides’ costs even if they are successful.

As with the currently frozen measures contained in Section 40 of the Crime & Courts Act, the only way for a publisher to avoid punitive costs would be to sign up to a state-approved regulator, which is the Max Mosley-funded Impress. This is an organisati­on whose chief executive has supported the “Stop Funding Hate” campaign which targets advertiser­s in the Sun, Daily Mail and Daily Express and as a result cannot be involved in the unlikely event Impress ever has to deal with complaints against them.

Another DPB amendment effectivel­y revives the Leveson Inquiry, under the guise of an investigat­ion into past data protection breaches by media organisati­ons like phone hacking. But it would suck in all media organisati­ons and the purpose of an expensive public probe would be to recommend a further tightening of a string of laws controllin­g journalism.

The measures got through the Lords last week and the amended bill comes back to the Commons for committee scrutiny until the end of March and then a final vote to put it on the statute book in late May.

If Cole-hamilton and his Westminste­r counterpar­t, the West Edinburgh Lib Dem MP and former Press Associatio­n Scotland editor Christine Jardine, truly believe in freedom of the press, then they will be speaking to their parliament­ary colleagues to make sure this illiberal legislatio­n fails. ● John Mclellan is director of the Scottish Newspaper Society

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