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Is there a crisis in British Journalism? Consider this – Brian Cathcart

A shameful catalogue of events has been unfolding, but most journalists refuse to face it – or report it.  All of these are current or recent:

There is more, but surely that is enough. This state of affairs cannot be defended – and the list doesn’t even begin to address dishonest election coverage.

The promises made by the press industry to clean up its act have clearly proved  false. IPSO’s failure to uphold standards is abject – it may actually be less effective than its disgraced predecessor the Press Complaints Commission.  And the Conservative case that ‘much has changed’ in the press since the Leveson inquiry has fallen apart.

But though there is obviously a crisis, and though many people are suffering harm as a result, British journalism shows no inclination to do anything about it, indeed journalists prefer to pretend it is not happening. With very rare exceptions, no one writing in the press or discussing the press on radio or television is prepared to join the dots.

It is as if the crew of the Titanic agreed among themselves not to mention that the ship had struck an iceberg and was holed below the waterline.

Peter Oborne, who investigated the propagation of lies from 10 Downing Street, wrote: ‘I’ve found it hard to get this article in print.’ (He published at OpenDemocracy.) The extraordinary revelations emerging from the phone hacking litigation are rarely reported by anyone save Byline Investigates. No one in the press has written a word about the very detailed Unmasked report on the scandal surrounding Times journalist Andrew Norfolk.

And this code of silence is accepted in places you might not expect. You will look in vain to the Guardian, the Financial Times, BBC news, Channel 4 News, Private Eye or Press Gazette for halfway serious scrutiny of IPSO’s failure. Nor, since the retirement of the Guardian’s Nick Davies, does anyone at any significant national news organisation – even the ones that employ ‘media editors’ – actually investigate misconduct by journalists.

British journalism will never clean up its own mess, no matter how bad it gets. We need Leveson part two now.

This post was originally published on Byline.com and is reproduced with permission and thanks.

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