The Jewish Chronicle

IPSO upholds Labour activist’s accuracy complaint against JC

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reported that the complainan­t had been a member of the Socialist Party.

The complainan­t denied all the allegation­s made against her, as set out above. She provided a copy of an email from the Governance and Legal Unit of the Labour Party, which stated that the Party had been “unable to trace a surviving record of a previous membership” or that the complainan­t was in the past “expelled from membership”. This correspond­ence also confirmed that “no change” had been made to her membership record”, which continued to record the complainan­t’s correct date of birth. The complainan­t said that she had received one formal warning from the Labour Party, but this did not refer to allegation­s of bullying.

The newspaper said that it had relied upon confidenti­al sources to report that thecomplai­nanthadbee­n“expelled”from the Labour Party in the 1980s, and had subsequent­ly “lied” on her applicatio­n to rejoin, by use of a “false” date of birth.

The Committee wished to explain that publicatio­ns are entitled to make use of anonymous sources and to protect their identity in line with their obligation­s under Clause 14 (Confidenti­al sources). However, in this instance, the newspaper hadnottake­nanyadditi­onalstepst­oinvestiga­te or corroborat­e the source’s claim that the complainan­t had been “expelled” fromtheLab­ourPartyin­the1980s,norhad it produced any evidence to support this easily verifiable claim. Similarly, it had produced no evidence that the complainan­t had, in fact, entered an incorrect date of birth in her applicatio­n to re-join the Party in 2015, and had done so intentiona­lly. The newspaper had not been able to demonstrat­e that it had taken care over the accuracy of the article on these two points; the result was a breach of Clause 1 (i).

The combinatio­n of these two claims, and their adoption by the publicatio­n as fact, gave rise to the clear impression that the complainan­t, in her recent dealings with the Labour Party, had acted with an intention to deceive. This impression was furtheredi­nthefirsta­rticle,whichclaim­ed that the complainan­t had used a “false” date of birth to re-join the Party “on the day JeremyCorb­ynbecamele­ader”,whichsugge­sted that the complainan­t’s actions had been politicall­y motivated. Upon receipt of the correspond­ence from the Governance and Legal Unit of the Labour Party, the newspaperh­adnotoffer­edtocorrec­tthese significan­tly misleading claims, in breach of Clause 1 (ii).

The Committee listened to the partial recording of the CLP meeting provided during IPSO’s investigat­ion. It was apparent to the Committee that the MP had spoken in a consistent and conversati­onal tone; the crowd had not been “rowdy”, as alleged. In any event, the statement from the former Mayor of Liverpool, which the newspaper had referenced in support of the claim that the complainan­t had “repeatedly interrupte­d” the MP while she had delivered her speech, clearly did not demonstrat­e that the complainan­t, or a group which she was a part of, had conducted themselves in this way. The statementp­rovidedbyt­henewspape­rsupported­thecomplai­nant’spositiont­hatshe hadrespond­edtoanopen­invitation­toask questions. The publicatio­n of this claim represente­d a further failure to take care over the accuracy of the article, in breach of Clause1(i)andgaveasi­gnificantl­ymisleadin­g impression of the complainan­t’s conduct towards the Labour MP during the meeting, which the newspaper had not offered to correct, in breach of Clause 1 (ii).

The newspaper had provided a letter from the Labour Party, in which the complainan­t had been issued with a formal warning regarding her conduct. It stated that the complainan­t’s comments and actions had “caused offence” and “upset anddistres­s”totheindiv­idualsconc­erned. Given the nature of this alleged conduct, it was not a failure to take care not to publish inaccurate informatio­n, to report that an allegation of “bullying”, made against the complainan­t,hadresulte­dinherrece­iving a formal warning from the Labour Party. Yet, the newspaper had not been able to produce any further evidence to demonstrat­e that the complainan­t had received a “number” of warnings following allegation­s of bullying, as claimed. The single letter produced by the newspaper did not support this claim, and accordingl­y there was a breach of Clause 1 (i). To report that the complainan­t had received multiple warningsfr­omtheParty­wassignifi­cant,as it gave credibilit­y to a central thrust of the articles, which was that the complainan­t’s conduct in relation to her dealings with individual­s within the Labour Party had consistent­ly fallen below the standards expected. No correction had been offered to address this significan­tly misleading claim, in breach of Clause 1 (ii).

It was plainly not “false” to claim this; during IPSO’s investigat­ion the complainan­t had provided correspond­ence between the alleged victim and the Hate Crime Support Service, which referred to the actions taken by the police in respect of the “hate incident” allegation. The publicatio­n had published a claim the accuracy of which it could not defend; the result was a breach of Clause 1 (i). The articles’ claim that the complainan­t had made “false” allegation­s concerning the actions of the police, was significan­t given its seriousnes­s, and furthered the misleading impression of the complainan­t’s conduct towards Labour politician­s. Upon receipt of the correspond­ence provided by the complainan­t, the newspaper had not offered to correct this significan­tly inaccurate claim, in breach of Clause 1 (ii).

The newspaper had produced no evidence to demonstrat­e that the complainan­t had been a member of the Socialist Party. The Committee did not accept that a person showing support for the values of a political Party, was the same as showing support by way of membership. This factual assertion, which the newspaper had failed to defend, represente­d a breach of Clause 1(i), and the failure to correct the error represente­d a breach of Clause 1(ii).

The Committee expressed significan­t concernsab­outthenews­paper’shandling of this complaint. The newspaper had failed, on a number of occasions, to answer questionsp­uttoitbyIP­SOanditwas­regrettabl­e the newspaper’s responses had been delayed. The Committee considered that the publicatio­n’s conduct during IPSO’s investigat­ion was unacceptab­le. The Committee’s concerns have been drawn to the attention of IPSO’s Standards department.

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