This post is about the Brexit Dividend and how broadcasters should
treat it. However I want to start with an extreme case: Donald Trump.
He is the right place to start because he became POTUS in good part
because of how the media treated him and his opponent. He gained
publicity by saying outrageous things. That increased his poll
rating, so he started getting favourable coverage because his poll
ratings were going up. (I explain how this works in more detail
here.)
Once he was the republican candidate, the media’s obsession with
balance meant they spent
as much time talking about the trivial issue of Clinton’s emails as
Trump’s lies, whether he pays any taxes, bribes officials and
assaults women.
One of the most remarkable polls during that campaign was that more
people trusted Trump than Hillary Clinton. How can someone who lies
all the time, almost every time he says anything, be trusted more
than Hillary Clinton, who has had countless Republican inspired
investigations into her affairs and has never been convicted of anything.
For some time cognitive
linguist and philosopher George Lakoff has pioneered the idea that
(among many other things - see for example a Guardian article
with Gil Duran) lies that are repeated often enough become
associations in people’s minds that they find it hard to combat. So
the phrase ‘crooked Hillary’ that Trump repeats all the time has
a purpose beyond firing up the base. Equally when Republican’s
start investigations into her affairs that alone puts an association
of guilt in people’s minds. That is a key reason why before the
election they trusted Trump more than Clinton.
In the United
States Trump played the media big time, and continues to do so. If
the media is not careful the same thing could happen here. The phrase
‘Brexit dividend’ is the equivalent of ‘crooked Hillary’. If
it is repeated enough, a sufficient number of people will begin to
associate Brexit with a ‘dividend’, whether that dividend is real
or not. And in case someone reading this does not know by now, the
Brexit dividend is a complete fiction.
To see how
May’s claim that there is a Brexit dividend should be handled, read
this
in the FT and this
from Sky News. (HT Femi) The FT article does not have ‘Brexit
dividend’ in its title, and this is important. As Lakoff argues,
the more often people see those two words together the more likely
they are to associate them, so do not put it in a headline as many
people just read headlines. (Putting it in inverted commas does
nothing.) He suggests what he calls the ‘truth sandwich’
approach: begin with a truthful statement, then report the dishonest
spin, and then fact check the spin. Leaving out that first stage
plays into the hands of whoever promoted the spin.
Who are the
heroes and villains in this example of barefaced lying (see my definition of barefaced below). For villains
we have to start with Theresa May herself:
if this is a sop to the Brexiters in exchange for a soft Brexit that
is no mitigation. Boris Johnson of course for suggesting the idea:
the court might like to take a large number of previous offences into
account. The right wing Brexit press
for whom lying is just part of their game.
Heroes
include Paul Johnson, who toured the broadcasters on Sunday to
emphatically say there was no dividend, and Conservative MP Sarah
Wollaston for saying
it was complete nonsense, as well as the two references already given
in the FT and from Sky News. I hope there were other examples that I
did not happen to notice.
What about
the BBC? It did have Paul Johnson on, and Laura Kuenssberg did at
least ask
the existential question, although she felt unable to answer it.
(There are not ‘economic’ and ‘political’ truths: arithmetic
is arithmetic, lies are lies.) But there are unfortunately other
occasions when the Brexit dividend was treated as if it was real and
put into headlines (e.g. here),
missing out the first layer of the truth sandwich. And of course the
Marr interview on Sunday, where he did not even question the concept.
All too often (e.g. here)
any questioning of the dividend was left to the end of the article
and was presented in the standard ‘he said,she said’ format.
Why does this
all matter? In terms of Brexit, it is obvious. Another barefaced lie in the Brexit campaign was £350 per week
for the NHS. Most Brexiters continue to believe that they will be
better off after Brexit, and I suspect most are not aware why this is
unlikely to be true. Talk of the Brexit dividend is designed to keep
them in their ignorance.
But I think
its importance goes well beyond Brexit. Why don’t politicians lie
more often to enhance their cause? Some have integrity, but for the
others the deterrent is being found out. But being found out depends
critically on the media calling out lies when they happen. And when a
large section of the media are very selective about how they treat
lies depending on who said them or why they were said, or indeed are
often the source of these lies, society has a serious problem.
That is the
situation in the US with Fox and Trump and in the UK with the right
wing press and Brexit or the Conservatives more generally. How the
print media in the US and the broadcast media in the UK treats lies
has therefore become critical. With lies ‘she said, he said’ type
reporting is just not sufficient to defend democracy. Now often it is
quite difficult to prove someone is lying, but if I could delineate a
barefaced lie as one where it is very easy to establish the truth,
then the Brexit dividend is a barefaced lie. OBR documents, accepted
by the government as the basis for their tax and spend decisions,
show quite clearly that the money has already been spent. You cannot
spend the same money twice.
The right
wing Brexit press have already supported this lie. As most of their
readers also watch broadcasters, it is imperative that these
broadcasters inflict some political damage on those who tell the lie.
If they do not, the lesson certain politicians will draw is that they
too can get away with barefaced lies, encouraging the kind of
behaviour we see with Trump. For that reason broadcasters have to
speak truth to power, otherwise the non-partisan media becomes complicit in propaganda or just a mouthpiece for politicians.