I like neeps wrote: ↑Fri May 20, 2022 8:44 am
Tichtheid wrote: ↑Fri May 20, 2022 8:34 am
I like neeps wrote: ↑Fri May 20, 2022 7:28 am
As long as the govt don't run the press I don't think it's a failure in the democratic process... The problem is the press run the govt - not a problem I think was considered when everyone in the British state bent over for Murdoch et al.
Quite smart though, the press have the BBC and Labour absolutely terrified to even mention Brexit.
The media doesn't report on politics, it seeks to influence it, what you call "smart" is very much a failure of the democratic process. The electorate should be well informed but it really isn't. This is the job of the media and they are failing, badly.
They offer opposing views for the sake of "balance" when there really isn't a credible bit of evidence for that opposing view, see climate change.
No, the democratic process requires a free media which we technically have. The job of media outlets isn't cold factual truth to power reporting - it's all a business afterall. The job of the BBC is neutrality and the BBC failed. But, the media always tries to influence politics no matter who owns it. The Guardian, Mirror etc exposed partygate just as much as the Sun has ran with beergate. The billionaire class just happens to be more successful at it.
Are the media too powerful? All billionaires are too powerful.
Other Countries have controls to stop individuals getting too much control over the media, that owners don't have undue influence over the Editorial line, & that the owners should be, "
fit & proper". As it stands in the UK, there are more controls over who owns a pub, or a Division 2 football side, than there are over who owns a TV network, or Newspaper Empire.
The only way to fix this is cross-Party support, but that's never going to happen, so now a handful of billionaires, who contribute nothing to the UK, control your Political parties.