The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

PM warns over heavy-handed rules for media

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David Cameron yesterday said he did not want “heavy-handed state interventi­on” in the activities of the press, as a result of the Leveson Inquiry into media ethics.

The prime minister resisted pressure to commit himself in advance to implementi­ng the recommenda­tions of Lord Justice Leveson’s upcoming report.

The Hacked Off campaign yesterday sent an open letter to Mr Cameron voicing concern over reports suggesting he was preparing to reject statutory regulation of the press, even if it was strongly recommende­d by the report, due within the next few weeks.

Mr Cameron said yesterday that the existing system for regulating the press is not acceptable and he hoped Leveson would put forward a sensible new regime.

But he insisted that he would wait to see what the report contained before deciding what action to take.

Askedyeste­rdaywhethe­r he would stick to his reported promise to implement Leveson’s recommenda­tions, providing they were not “bonkers”, Mr Cameron said in a TV interview: “Absolutely.”

But he added: “We must wait for what Lord Justice Leveson says. I don’t want to try to prejudge it. We have got to wait until he produces his report.”

Mr Cameron said: “We don’t want heavy-handed state interventi­on. We have got to have a free press. They have got to be free to uncover wrongdoing, to follow the evidence, to do the job in our democracy that they need to do.

“But on the other hand, it is quite clear people have been abused, people’s families and lives have been torn up by press intrusion.

“I fully intend and - I think this goes right across the parties - we all want to put in place a sensible regulatory system.”

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