Nov 132011
 

Wikipedia Commons

John Naughton’s always excellent Memex 1.1 pointed us yesterday in the direction of an article by David Runciman in the Guardian on Friday.  The article’s thesis essentially runs as follows: the dynastic proclivities of the printed press have meant that democracy in Britain has been seriously undermined by the comparatively temporary nature of politicians:

[...] As well as having short attention spans, newspapers also have long ones. They are still there long after the politicians have gone, which means they always get the last word. At the beginning of the film The Queen, Tony Blair is ushered into Downing Street and told by his monarch that he is her 10th prime minister. It is not hard to imagine a similar scene being played out in the court of Rupert Murdoch. David Cameron, after all, is his seventh prime minister. Murdoch resembles the Queen in more ways than he might like to admit. As well as being autocratic, press power also tends to be dynastic (the Daily Mail still belongs to the Rothermeres; Murdoch is still desperate to pass some newspapers to his children, as his father passed some newspapers to him). A lot depends on being able to outlast the politicians. The web has undone plenty of things about the newspaper business, but so far it hasn’t undone that. Newspaper owners can keep their power in the family in a way that democratic politicians can’t, however much some of them (the Clintons, the Bushes) might like to try.

However, so the thesis continues, as printed news-gathering and opinion-forming becomes more and more web-based, and web-based ecosystems rise and fall with greater enthusiasm, the fierce hold which such organisations have been able to maintain over our democratic discourse will become less imposing and effective.

This leads us to realise, happily perhaps, especially in the light of youthful campaigns such as the #occupylsx movement, that – in order for democracies to function at all well – we need rolling change in all its pillars rather more than we need the traditional experience of old.  That is to say, we don’t only need to refresh the politicos on a regular basis; we also need to refresh the journos and – in particular – their owners.

The problem, of course, with such a conclusion as this is how – at the same time – we take advantage of the steady hands of wisdom which most societies over time quite rightly engender.

Even as there are some cases of longevity none of us would wish to ever promote.

That, then, is the challenge of democracies across the world.  Empowering the people to choose as they should in an environment of debate which – itself – does not become just as debatable.

Perhaps, again, in its rapacious pursuit of excellence, the web will come riding to our rescue.

This time not via content – nor, indeed, through software code or technological empowerment.  Rather, far more profoundly, as a result of its fleeting and helter-skelter business models.

From 24-hour news to 24-hour politicians to 24-hour news-gathering organisations … it all comes full circle.  Yet, it does occur to me that as we guarantee the freshness of our democratic institutions, we run the risk not only of unnecessarily starting from scratch but also losing our precious sense of history.

On the other hand, perhaps that is all to the good.  Too many violences have been committed in the name of historical coherence.  Maybe we would all be better off without that dead hand of experience I describe.

So does democracy need change more than it needs that experience?

Whether we like the idea or not, I think over the next few years that is exactly what we are going to find out.

Jul 072011
 

This brilliant tweet from fieldproducer, which came my way via Lisa Ansell’s Twitter feed, just summarises the current situation perfectly:

Currently News International are investigating themselves,the Met Police are investigating themselves & the PCC are investigating themselves

The big big question really is: if my wife or one of my sons had hacked into Mr Cameron’s voicemail, would the papers, the police and the wider establishment be happy for me to put everything on hold with the assurance that a thorough familial investigation would be sooner or later carried out?

If this was a story with Mr Silvio Berlusconi at the top of it, we’d all be crying foul and making as many waves as possible.  But this is supposed to be the country of the Magna Carta and hundreds of years of democracy.

Isn’t it?
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Update to this post: this, from John Naughton’s Memex, is something I’ve already tweeted about this morning.

The networked intelligence of the Internet does need to be supported with ethically funded news-gathering outfits.  And in order that this may happen, we as individuals need to pay for some of what we consume online.  But we should be given the option of subscribing to individual authors, or maybe teams, rather than being obliged to a take-it-or-leave-it immersive publishing relationship by cross-subsidising monoliths – monoliths which will always try and throw us back to 20th century publishing models.

So.  Pay-to-read-journalism – we definitely need it.  20th century throwback subscription models – we’re definitely not looking for.

Further update to this post: Anthony Painter has just published a piece over at Labour Uncut suggesting that it’s time News International were broken up.  He makes a convincing case.  More here.

Jan 242011
 

Italy’s got a fantastic culture, heritage and people.  But the story I draw your attention to today is not fantastic.  From El País yesterday, this choice phrase:

“mejor un putero que hace buenas leyes que un notable catolicísimo que promulga normas contrarias a la Iglesia”

Loosely translated, this reads in English as:

“a client of prostitutes who makes good laws is better than a notable Catholicism which promulgates norms against the teachings of the Church”

Who is supposed to have said this then?  Some corrupt politician or other perhaps?  Well.  Not exactly.  Only Vittorio Messori, the Catholic theologian close to Opus Dei.

So who really is corrupting whom then?

Words finally fail me.

Dec 012010
 

Many people seem to express very little surprise at the opinions held in the confidential diplomatic cables released by a number of newspapers and the WikiLeaks organisation.  This story from the Telegraph for example underlines this perception:

Hillary Clinton has faced Silvio Berlusconi for the first time since the Italian Prime Minister, was dismissed as “feckless, vain, and ineffective as a modern leader” in US State Department cables released by WikiLeaks.

But Berlusconi’s response was apparently relaxed:

The 74-year-old Italian prime minister, has already made light of the leaked cables, on Monday laughing off the suggestion in one that his “frequent late nights and penchant for partying hard mean he does not get sufficient rest.” “Unfortunately, I have never in my life taken part in any ’wild party’” he said. “They may be interesting.”

I just wonder if – long-term – there may be an entirely constructive consequence of these leaks.  What if diplomats were allowed to shed their softly-softly approach to power-broking and say, sooner rather than later, what their nations truly believed, expected and wanted?  Surely such open and honest communication could only benefit international discourse and its processes – as well as reducing the time wasted by walking on eggshells.

What is absolutely clear is that too much time is currently wasted not saying things everyone knows to be the case.

And what is also now clear for the rest of us mortals is that the American State Department doesn’t half have some damn good analysts and writers.
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Further reading: David Allen Green has just published a rather more critical piece on the WikiLeaks saga at New Statesman.  This piece is interesting and even-handed and deserves to be read more widely.

May 122010
 

It’s all questions at the moment.  Fixed terms is fine – though I’d prefer four-year terms to five-year plans.  But raising the “no confidence” threshold?  What’s that about?

Ramifications here:

MPs will not be able to throw out the government unless at least 55% of them vote to do so, under plans agreed by the Conservatives and Lib Dems.

The move would protect David Cameron from losing power even if the coalition partners decided to split up.

Expert response here:

Constitutional expert Peter Hennessy, of Queen Mary University of London University, told BBC News: “Fifty-five per cent of MPs needed for a government to lose a confidence vote – I am not sure that’s a very sensible change.

“The tradition is that one [vote] is enough and I wouldn’t tinker with that. I would leave that well alone. It looks as if you are priming the pitch, doctoring it a bit. Not good. It’s meant to be a different politics, new politics.”

So what message is that intended to send out?

No, Mr Cameron.  This is not good.  Shame on you, in fact.

This is no better than the expenses scandal.  Parliament looking after its own all over again.  And we’re only on Day 1 of this new government.

Reminds me so very much of Silvio Berlusconi’s recent passing of a law which makes it impossible to take him to court if he can show he’s too busy.

Any old pretext, in fact.  This isn’t new politics at all.  This is the same old politics that has disengaged voters for decades.
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Further reading: Northern Heckler does an almighty piece of dissection on this subject here.  Well worth a visit.