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Australia: Newcastle newspaper distorts SEPs position
on law and order
By our reporter
23 March 2007
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On March 21, the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) wrote to
Chad Watson of the Newcastle Herald strongly protesting
an article by journalist Jason Gordon implying that the SEP agreed
with the law and order campaign that has dominated the newspapers
election coverage over the last weeks.
Reporting the Law Societys candidates forum
of March 19, Gordon declared the crowd applauded when anyone
spoke of putting more police back on the streets or placing stricter
controls on pubs, clubs and even liquor-licensed restaurants and
cafes, and then, All seven election candidates said
they would support a lockdown, lockout or curfew.
Noel Holt, the SEPs candidate for Newcastle, was one
of the seven candidates participating. In the course of the forum,
Holt emphasised his opposition to all such measures and to calls
for increased police numbers. The SEP candidate drew out that
the underlying causes of anti-social behaviourthe lack of
jobs, the gutting of social services and the collapse in social
infrastructurehad to be addressed.
The SEP asked the Herald to print a clearly stated
retraction of the inferences in Gordons article. Two days
later, on the eve of the state election, it has still failed to
do so.
The SEP also protested the Heralds deliberate
exclusion from its election reportage of the four minor
candidates standing in Newcastle and the lack of any coverage
of the extensive campaign of the SEP.
This morning the Herald published a quarter-page
feature article including photographs of all nine candidates,
along with their political affiliation. This last minute response
fails to rectify the Heralds utter disregard for
the democratic rights of the candidates it has ignored over the
past weeks. It also fails to redress the breach of its responsibility
to provide its readers with accurate information.
Below is the full text of the SEPs March 21 letter
to the Newcastle Herald.
Dear Mr Watson,
I am writing to reiterate complaints I made, in our discussion
of March 20, on behalf of the Socialist Equality Partys
lower house candidate, Noel Holt.
The first relates to the lack of coverage by the Newcastle
Herald of the Socialist Equality Partys election campaign
for the NSW seat of Newcastle. During the course of five weeks,
the Herald has published numerous articles and reports
on the campaigns of the five candidates it has determined worthy
of covering, while maintaining a complete silence on the SEPs
campaign.
Such a policy is anti-democratic to the core. It prevents the
residents of Newcastle from being informed about the policies
of all the candidates whose nominations have been accepted, while
at the same time, attacking the right of our candidate, Noel Holt,
to be heard.
The SEPs campaign is focussed on vital issues facing
working peoplethe war in Iraq, growing militarism in Australia
and around the world, escalating social inequality, the devastating
impact of government cuts on the lives of workers and their families,
and the assault on democratic rights. In direct contrast to all
the other candidates, we are presenting a socialistthat
is, a genuinely egalitarian, democratic and humanealternative.
Under conditions where it is common knowledge that disenchantment
and disgust with the major parties has reached unprecedented levels,
our campaign articulates the needs and interests of the working
class. And we have received considerable support. So far, with
the help of many local residents, we have distributed many thousands
of copies of our election statement, held daily street campaigns
andwhen permitted to participatespoken at candidates
forums and other public events. The SEP is the only political
party in the Newcastle electorate to have held a public meeting
to present and discuss its policies.
Yet, except for a few lines in the March 16 edition acknowledging
the existence of our candidate, the Newcastle Herald has
chosen to ignore our campaign. On March 18, the Sun Herald
published an election roundup, with a section headed Newcastle
Candidates. This only featured photographs and statements
of five candidates, even though you are aware that nine are contesting
the seat of Newcastle. Again, the SEP was excluded.
Coming just days before the election, this constitutes not
only an affront to the democratic rights of the excluded candidates,
but a serious breach of your newspapers responsibility to
provide accurate and unbiased information to its readers.
My second complaint is far more serious, because it involves
outright misrepresentation and the lack of journalistic integrity.
Yesterday, as you know, I telephoned your journalist Jason
Gordon to strongly protest his coverage of the Law Society candidates
forum held on March 19. In his article, Gordon gave the impression
that the SEP agreed with the law and order campaign that has been
raging in Newcastle for some weeks.
After declaring the crowd applauded when anyone spoke
of putting more police back on the streets or placing stricter
controls on pubs, clubs and even liquor-licensed restaurants and
cafes, Mr Gordon wrote: All seven election candidates
said they would support a lockdown, lockout or curfew.
Noel Holt was one of the seven candidates who participated
in the forum. The unmistakeable implication was that he endorsed
this view. In fact, Holt emphasised his opposition to such measures,
pointing out that they avoided the real underlying causes of anti-social
behaviour. These, he said, lay in the lack of jobs, the gutting
of social services and the collapse in social infrastructure that
were the direct result of the pro-market policies of both Labor
and Liberal governments.
Throughout the evening Holt repeated his rejection of all calls
for increased police numbers, curfews and other repressive measures,
and was the only candidate to do so.
That Mr Gordon chose not to report this clearly-stated opposition,
together with his sweeping inclusion of Holt in the law and order
campaign, amounts to a gross misrepresentation, deliberate or
otherwise, of the SEPs position.
When I spoke to Mr Gordon on this issue, and on the lack of
coverage of our campaign, he maintained he had received no information
from the SEP. This is not correct.
On February 20, I telephoned Gordon to inform him of Holts
exclusion from the New Institutes forum. On the same day,
I personally delivered a copy of the SEPs election statement,
marked for his attention, to the Newcastle Heralds
offices. During our discussion yesterday, I was unable to raise
our concerns about his March 20 article because he rudely hung
up on me.
On behalf of the SEP, I am formally requesting that your newspaper
print a clearly stated retraction of any and all inferences that
our candidate Noel Holt in any way supports or endorses an increase
in police numbers or any of the repressive measures that have
been proposed by other candidates, and that he advocates, on the
contrary, policies that will address the root cause of the terrible
social problems that afflict young people and workers in Newcastle
and the growing levels of social inequality.
To this end, you may wish to quote directly from Noels
contribution to the Law Society forum or his speech to the Business
Councils forum, in which he addressed these and other vital
issues. Noel is also available to be interviewed to further clarify
the SEPs position.
Yours Sincerely,
Terry Cook
SEP Campaign Manager
Newcastle
See Also:
SEP Election Web Site
New South Wales March 24 election:
How to vote for the Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
[22 March 2007]
Australia: the socialist alternative
in the New South Wales state election
Support the SEP campaign
[10 February 2007]
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