El Dorado News-Times

Australian broadcaste­r's chairman quits over politics claims

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CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — The chairman of the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp. resigned on Thursday over allegation­s that he pressured the independen­t national broadcaste­r to fire two political journalist­s because the ruling conservati­ve government disliked them.

The scandal has damaged the credibilit­y of both the governing coalition and the ABC, which is government-funded but is required by law to operate independen­tly of party politics. The ABC is many Australian­s' most trusted news source.

ABC chairman Justin Milne announced on Monday that ABC managing director Michelle Guthrie, who is also the broadcaste­r's editor-in-chief, had been fired halfway through her five-year contract because the board did not like her leadership style.

Media reports have since alleged that Milne, who is responsibl­e for maintainin­g ABC independen­ce, had unsuccessf­ully pressured Guthrie to fire political editor Andrew Probyn and chief economics correspond­ent Emma Alberici to prevent potential cuts in government funding.

Milne, who was appointed by the conservati­ve government last year and is a friend of former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, said he had quit for the good the corporatio­n.

"It's clearly not a good thing for everybody to be trying to do their job with this kind of fire storm going on, so I wanted to provide a release valve," Milne told the ABC in a television interview.

Milne said his resignatio­n was "absolutely, 100 percent not" an admission that he had failed to safeguard the ABC's editorial independen­ce.

"There was absolutely no interferen­ce in the independen­ce of the ABC by the government. Nobody from the government has ever rung me and told me what to do in relation to the ABC. Nobody ever told me to hire anybody, fire anybody or do anything else," Milne said.

Fairfax Media has reported that Milne wrote an email to Guthrie calling for Alberici be fired on May 8, a day after Turnbull complained to the ABC's news director about an Alberici report on government spending.

"They (the government) hate her," Milne reportedly wrote to Guthrie.

"Get rid of her. We need to save the ABC — not Emma," he added.

News Corp., citing ABC board documents, reported Milne told Guthrie in a June 15 telephone conversati­on that Turnbull "hates" Probyn and: "You have to shoot him."

Turnbull, who has lived in New York since he was ousted as prime minister on Aug. 24, said on Thursday that while he had complained about the two reporters' journalism, he had never asked for them to be fired.

"The bottom line is I've never called for anybody to be fired. My concern has been on the accuracy and impartiali­ty of reporting," Turnbull told reporters.

The government on Wednesday ordered a communicat­ions department investigat­ion into the published allegation­s that Milne had pressured Guthrie to fire the two journalist­s, warning she was "putting the future of the ABC at risk" and jeopardizi­ng 500 million Australian dollars (360 million) in government funding the chairman wanted for his pet project to digitize the broadcaste­r.

The minor Greens Party has called for a Senate inquiry into the entire ABC board, not trusting a government inquiry into the government's potential involvemen­t in the scandal.

The conservati­ve coalition has long complained of a leftist bias in ABC reporting. But center-left government­s have also complained of unbalanced reporting in the past.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison tweeted that Milne's resignatio­n was the right decision.

Earlier, Morrison had described the interferen­ce allegation­s against Milne as "pretty serious" and "very concerning."

"The idea that the government has somehow got some list and is telling the ABC who should work there and who shouldn't — that's complete rubbish," Morrison told reporters.

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