The Scotsman

Tory ministers should listen over Channel 4 proposals

- Alistair Grant alistair.grant@jpimedia.co.uk

The plans to privatise Channel 4 have already caused a storm, and this will continue raging in the weeks and months ahead.

As well as a hostile opposition, Tory ministers may have to contend with a backlash from within their own party.

Former Scottish Conservati­ve leader Ruth Davidson called it the "opposite of levelling up" and pointed to the thriving independen­t TV sector in Glasgow.

The proposals are a source of major concern for the industry in Scotland.

C4 has a creative hub in Glasgow. As a "publisher broadcaste­r", the channel works with around 300 independen­t companies across the UK every year, according to its website.

It has to commission a certain amount of content from outside London, and last year its spend in the "nations and regions" hit a record high.

There are fears privatisat­ion would threaten this important creative ecosystem.

It doesn't help that UK Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries previously appeared to misunderst­and C4's unique model.

Set up under Margaret Thatcher's Conservati­ve government in 1982, it is publicly owned but funded through advertisin­g.

Despite this, Ms Dorries talked of it being "in receipt of public money".

She argues government ownership "is holding Channel 4 back from competing against streaming giants like Netflix and Amazon" and insists privatisat­ion would give it "the tools and freedom to flourish and thrive as a public service broadcaste­r".

The cash raised from the sale would be reinvested "into levelling up the creative sector,” she said.

Comparison­s with Netflix and Amazon are generally unhelpful. For one thing, they have no equivalent of Channel 4 News.

This will be a long process, and any legislatio­n will have to pass through the Commons and the Lords.

It is vital decisions are made for the right reasons – and that Scotland’s independen­t screen sector does not suffer.

UK ministers should listen carefully to those on the ground.

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