In the course of last year the SACP along with its Alliance partners attempted to open up a debate about the state of the media, particularly the print media, in our country. The debate quickly became ill-tempered and acrimonious. Because much of the debate was conducted on the terrain of the print media itself, we (that is, us Alliance politicians) found ourselves perpetually having "an away game disadvantage" - as I remember writing at the time.
For better or worse, the print media contrived to focus the debate largely on the ANC's Polokwane conference proposal of a Media APPEALS Tribunal. I am emphasizing the critical word "appeals", because in the media reporting on the matter that word was usually dropped. But the word "appeals" tells you that what the ANC had in mind was a POST-publication appeals mechanism, not pre-publication censorship.
Unfortunately, the possibility of having a constructive dialogue between colleagues in the media and us Alliance politicians was further frustrated by ill-considered rough handling of individual journalists and mixed messages emanating from certain quarters of our Alliance.
The debate, or at least the way in which it was framed in the media, gave the impression that South Africa was heading away from media freedom towards some dark age of intolerance. International opinion was mobilized against this "threat" to our Constitution and to our hard-won democracy.
Despite all of this, there have been some encouraging, if often concealed, positives emerging from last year's debate. One among these was a survey conducted for the National Press Club. The survey interviewed 68 journalists countrywide last year and its results were released a few weeks ago (see here - PDF). Although the survey was of journalists commissioned by journalists and it was about journalism - surprisingly (or perhaps not surprisingly) it was almost entirely ignored in the media. Perhaps the media bosses didn't like what they saw in the mirror that was being held up in front of their noses? Personally, I came across one brief news story on the survey tucked away obscurely in a single publication - but it is possible I missed more extensive reporting somewhere else.
In the survey, the representative sample of journalists was asked to agree or disagree with a series of statements. In reply, for instance, to the statement "I never experience undue pressure to publish/broadcast a story if I don't consider it ready" - only 55% could agree. But at least that was a majority.