Tom Frewen
OPINION: AUCKLAND (Scoop Media / Pacific Media Watch): A move to censor television programmes likely to embarrass the New Zealand government during election campaigns is being considered by the broadcasting funding agency, NZ on Air.
The minutes of the NZ on Air board’s December meeting reveals a decision "to seek legal advice on whether NZ on Air could require an additional clause in the broadcast covenant requiring broadcasters not to screen programmes likely to be an election issue within the election period as defined in the Broadcasting Act".
A reaction to TV3’s screening of Bryan Bruce’s documentary, Inside Child Poverty: A Special Report, four days before the general election on November 26, the proposed ban on television programmes "discussing topics likely to be an election issue" during an election campaign would be an extraordinary first for a Western democracy, giving total control over television current affairs to a government agency run by political appointees and bureaucrats.
The alarm at TV3’s decision to screen the documentary on November 22 at 7.30pm, a slot normally occupied by "reality" genre programmes such as Drug Bust and Kalgoorlie Cops, was first raised by a board member, Stephen McElrea, who also happens to be John Key’s electorate chairman and the National Party’s northern region deputy chairman.
"Was NZOA aware that this doco was to be scheduled 4 days before the election?" he queried on November 17 to NZ on Air board chairman Neil Walter and chief executive Jane Wrightson.
"If not, should we have been? To me, it falls into the area of caution we show about political satire near elections."
After 20 years with TVNZ as a producer, director and manager, McElrea should be able to distinguish the difference between documentary and satire. Or is there a more sinister interpretation of his admission, as the reason for the disappearance of political satire from NZscreens in recent years?
Email panic
Certainly, the panic his email sparked at NZ on Air would make a good script for Yes Minister.
Next day, Neil Walters, a former secretary of Foreign Affairs appointed by Labour, emailed his fellow board members, informing them that, to avoid the delay in canvassing their opinions, he had already given the minister (Jonathan Coleman) "a heads-up [and] decided after talking with Jane (Wrightson) that we should register our strong disappointment with TV3 and put that in front of the Minister today".
Warning them that "we could attract some flak", he said, "time will tell how badly we have been dropped in it."
The chairman’s fear of being "dropped in it" was echoed in his chief executive’s email to the Minister’s Beehive office and fellow broadcasting bureaucrats at the Ministry for Culture and Heritage.
"We consider that we have been dropped in it on this occasion" Jane Wrightson told them, attaching a copy of a letter she had written that day to Sussan Turner, managing director of TV3’s owner MediaWorks.
Complaining that TV3’s scheduling of Inside Child Poverty: A Special Report in the week before the election had placed NZ on Air "in a difficult position", Wrightson wrote:
"We are jealous of our reputation as a politically neutral and impartial agency and put considerable effort into protecting that reputation. We take pains to ensure that we do not put ourselves in a position where we can be accused of political bias."
Reputation risk
Wrightson told TV3 that NZ on Air was "deeply disappointed" by the scheduling decision which risked "damaging NZ on Air’s reputation and calls into question our political impartiality."
Fears of having caused embarrassment to themselves and their political masters, evident as the main concern for Walters and Wrightson in their emails, proved groundless.
NZ on Air did not rate a mention in comment on the programme in the days after it was screened.
Wrightson’s relief is evident in an email to McElrea and other board members on November 24.
Noting that public debate had been confined to the views on the appropriate political response to child poverty "rather than party-specific", she added: "And thus far, no serious criticism of NZ on Air thankfully. Mainstream press more interested in tea party."
McElrea, however, believed his fellow board members should read a blog by Karl du Fresne who saw the documentary as further evidence in support of his belief in TV3’s editorial bias against Key’s National-led government.
* Read full text at: www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL1201/S00086/tom-frewen-nz-on-air-spooked-by-political-interference.htm