The Scotsman

Press standards inquiry axed by government ministers

- By ANDREW WOODCOCK

The government has ditched the second part of the Leveson Inquiry, which was due to look into unlawful conduct within media organisati­ons as well as relations between police and the press.

Culture Secretary Matt Hancock told the House of Commons that reopening the “costly and time-consuming” inquiry – which reported on press regulation and ethics in 2012 – was not “the right way forward”.

Mr Hancock also announced that the government will not put into effect a controvers­ial measure, which would have required media organisati­ons to sign up to a state-backed regulator or risk having to pay legal costs in both sides of a libel case, even if they won.

Ministers will seek to repeal the measure, contained in Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act, “at the earliest opportunit­y”, he told MPS. Labour shadow culture secretary Tom Watson described the decision not to go ahead with the second part of Leveson as “a bitter blow to the victims of press intrusion”.

Announcing the original inquiry in 2011 in response to a wave of public anger over alleged phone-hacking by the now-defunct News Of The World, then-prime minister David Cameron said that it would be in two parts.

The first would look at the culture, practices and ethics of the press, while the second – which could not begin until after all criminal investigat­ions were concluded – would enquire into “unlawful or improper conduct” within media organisati­ons and their relations with the police. But Mr Hancock said there had been “significan­t progress” in the practices of the press and the police, including by the creation of the new Independen­t Press Complaints Standards Organisati­on, since Sir Brian Leveson’s report in 2012.

A large majority of those responding to a consultati­on launched by his predecesso­r John Whittingda­le in 2016 opposed the implementa­tion of Leveson II, he said.

Telling MPS he was formally closing the inquiry, he said that priority should be given to dealing with the challenges of the modern media landscape, such as the rise of clickbait, fake news and social media.

Scottish Newspaper Society director John Mclellan said: “Although Section 40 would only have applied in English courts, its effect would have been felt by those Scottish titles owned by Uk-wide publishers and the principle of using a punitive costs regime to force publishers to join a state-backed regulator is being extended by Labour and Lib Dem peers to Uk-wide data protection legislatio­n.

“Imposing a system whereby

0 Culture Secretary Matt Hancock revealed the decision publishers who refuse to join a state-backed regulator are punished by having to meet all costs of civil court action even if they win, flies in the face of natural justice and is little more than statutory blackmail. It is vital that the Lords amendments to the Data Protection Bill are thrown out as well and we welcome the SNP’S clear opposition to statutory incentives.

“We also welcome the end of the Leveson Inquiry, which would have cost millions more on top of the £6 million already spent on part one.”

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