I’ve just
completed my book to be published in November by Bristol University
Press called ‘The Lies We Were Told’. It is the story of UK
austerity, the Eurozone crisis, how mediamacro swung the 2015 election, the Corbyn phenomenon, Brexit and more besides. These
things are described as they happened in selected blog posts with new
introductions, postscripts etc. (It can be ordered at a 20% discount
here,
rising to 35% if you join the publisher’s mailing
list.)
During the process
of selecting the blogs I needed to tell these stories, I came across
one
I had forgotten completely. It was called “Do we get the leaders
our media deserves?”, and it asked why many of the successful (in
terms of popularity) leaders of today are of the likes of Johnson,
Farage and Berlusconi, while leaders with far more integrity and
honesty like Ed Miliband appear unpopular. The post was written at
the end of 2014, and a postscript for the book notes that Trump
versus Clinton was in part a devastating example of this trend.
It is tempting to
respond by saying this is just what voters want: politicians that
make them feel good. There may be an element of that, but what has
nothing to do with voters is how the Johnson type politicians get a
easy ride from the media. When he deliberately stokes islamophobia,
the criticism is disarmed
with a cup of tea for waiting reporters. I have yet to see an
interview with Farage where he is questioned about his support for
far right parties in Europe and his Russian links. This interview
with Johnson by Eddie Mair stands out in talking about past sins
because it is so unusual. Most of the time the media seems content to
reflect his easy charm.
While people like
Farage or Johnson are normally treated with kid gloves, others get a
much harder ride. The left tried it with Cameron and Osborne: posh
Eton and Bullingdon
club boys who were clearly out of touch with ordinary voters.
Sometimes these attacks work, and sometimes they do not. No doubt the
reasons why are complex, but it seems to me that two things matter a
lot. The first is whether or not the person being attacked has the
personality to deflect such criticism, and the second reflects the
extent that attacks become part of the non-partisan media’s agenda.
Here
is a time series of how Corbyn’s leader ratings have been getting
steadily worse over the last year, and by far more than those of his
party. This could be for many reasons. It could reflect
disillusionment by Remain inclined Labour voters as events have shown
Labour’s pro-Brexit position is not just opportunistic triangulation. It
could reflect a lack of initiatives coming from the leadership
(although it does not help that when he does make speeches they are
blatantly misinterpreted).
It could be that Labour’s problems with antisemitism are
constantly in the news: although these stories do not have high
impact
among voters, for those that do notice they are seen
as a negative for Corbyn.
I have argued before
that the Labour surge before the 2017 election and the subsequent
decline are part of the same phenomenon: the ability of the media
rather than the politician to control the agenda outside of election
periods. The MSM is clearly much more hostile to Corbyn than any
other major political figure today, and the row over antisemitism
shows that clearly.
Because this debate
has become so partisan, I have to say the following. First, I am no Corbynite (read my
posts during the Corbyn vs Smith campaign). I also think
antisemitism within the Labour party is a real problem, and that
large parts of the membership seem
to be in denial about this. Not adopting all the IHRA examples (but
with accompanying text to clarify meaning drafted in consultation
with Jewish groups where possible) was a big political mistake. It
created concerns in the Jewish community that the media was right to
reflect. The idea that the non-partisan media’s reporting of this
is just a smear campaign is nonsense.
All those things can
be true, but it can also be true that the broadcast media has given
the issue excessive prominence. How do I know this? The obvious
comparison is with Islamophobia in the Conservative party. This has
been given much less coverage, but I would argue that problem is at
least as bad. As far as I know, Labour has never run a clearly
antisemitic campaign for a major political post, but the Tory party have run an Islamophobic campaign in which
the Tory leader played a major part. Some say the difference is
because Corbyn himself has been described as antisemitic, but the
betting odds for next Prime Minister for Johnson and Corbyn are similar. To say that broadcasters cannot help reporting what is going on is very naive about how the media selects what is newsworthy and what is not.
Many would argue
this bias is because Corbyn has few friends in the media, and that
may be a part of it [1], but I prefer more structural explanations.
For the broadcast media balance seems to involve MPs in Westminster
rather than their own viewers. Labour MPs are prepared to criticise
the leadership in public while Tory MPs are not, and this means one
story gets much more airtime than the other. [2] We can see this
clearly with Brexit: because the two main parties went with the 52%,
the point of view of the 48% (now more) who oppose Brexit was largely
ignored by the media. Exactly the same can now be said about the
Muslim community.
A good test of all
this is to reverse roles. Suppose Jeremy Corbyn had written an
article in which he had made fun of how orthodox Jews dress, and all
the party had asked him to do is apologise but he had refused.
Suppose the Labour party had no code at all covering antisemitism.
Would the broadcast media have been happy to show pictures of him
offering vegetables from his allotment to reporters and then
forgotten about the whole thing? I’m sure natural charm has
something to do with why some political leaders are treated
differently than others, but I think that is only a small part of the
story.
[1] It may explain,
for example, the lack critical reporting. Most of the time it is
presumed that Labour did not adopt all the IHRA examples because of
antisemitism. Until recently the Israel/Palestine conflict was hardly
mentioned, and neither was the fact that a select committee had suggested
the IHRA examples were unsatisfactory on their own. Ludicrous
statements about existential threats or rivers of blood go
unchallenged. In some quarters it is deemed insensitive to question
motives (Stephen Pollard, Jewish Chronicle editor, has said:
“The left, in any recognisable form, is now the enemy”). In contrast a Conservative minister is happy to dismiss claims of Islamophobia by attacking a group that made the claim as unrepresentative, and no one in the media notes the Conservative Muslim
Forum has made similar
complaints.
[2] Whatever else
this is, it is not good for democracy. Because Conservative MPs keep
quiet about Islamophobia in their party, the issue only appears
occasionally in the media. As a result, nothing is done about the
problem. In contrast Labour are trying to do something about
antisemitism, and their reward is constant attack.