Modern Australian
Times Advertising

Constant attacks on the ABC will come back to haunt the Coalition government

  • Written by Denis Muller, Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Advancing Journalism, University of Melbourne
Constant attacks on the ABC will come back to haunt the Coalition government

In January 1931, as the newly elected United Australia Party government of Joseph Lyons was contemplating the establishment of a national broadcasting service, the prime minister received a deputation of prominent Melburnians, including a barrister and member of the Victorian parliament, Robert Gordon Menzies.

They urged that the new broadcasting service “be organised on an independent basis and that cultural potentialities of the Broadcast Service be considered a matter of primary importance”. The broadcast service came to be named the Australian Broadcasting Commission and went to air for the first time on July 1 1932.

It is a measure of how far today’s Liberal Party has drifted away from the values and ideals of its founder, Menzies, that last Saturday its federal council should have resoundingly adopted a motion that the ABC should be privatised.

One of the proponents of the motion was Mitchell Collier, the federal vice-president of the Young Liberals. He said there was no economic case to keep the broadcaster in public hands.

Read more: View from The Hill: Threat to the ABC is not sale but more bullying

No economic case. Where the ABC is concerned, that is a false premise on which to proceed. The ABC was explicitly not established for economic purposes or in pursuit of an economic ideology. It was established for social, educational and cultural purposes.

It was also established on an explicitly non-commercial basis: it takes no advertising. Why? Because it was believed advertising would weaken its independence. The policymakers of the 1930s had seen only too clearly how beholden the newspaper proprietors of the day had become to commercial imperatives: the demands of advertisers and the pressure to increase circulation, even at the cost of editorial quality and integrity.

The newspapers of the day had also become mouthpieces for sectional interests. In Melbourne, The Argus stood for the interests of the mercantile classes and conservative political causes; The Age for a kind of Protestant liberalism and social justice. It supported the miners at Eureka.

The bipartisan political vision for the ABC was that it should not be vulnerable to sectional interests or commercial pressures, but should exist to serve the public interest in the widest sense.

The first paragraph of its charter captures the essence of these expectations:

The functions of the Corporation are to provide … innovative and comprehensive broadcasting services of a high standard … and … to provide broadcasting programs that contribute to a sense of national identity and inform and entertain, and reflect the cultural diversity of, the Australian community; and broadcasting programs of an educational nature.

No mention there of economic criteria.

Nonetheless, in a political age dominated by the narrow perspectives of neoclassical economics, it is self-evidently no longer enough to rely on ideals of the kind promoted by Menzies and reflected in the charter.

In her reply to the privatisation motion, the ABC’s managing director, Michelle Guthrie, told the Melbourne Press Club the ABC contributed more than $1 billion last financial year to the Australian economy, on a par with the public investment in the organisation.

She also advanced an efficiency argument, saying the ABC’s per capita funding had halved in real terms over the past 30 years, and warned that the latest cuts in funding – $83.7 million in a so-called efficiency dividend – would serve only to punish audiences.

Herein lies the political sting for the government, and especially for the National Party.

A motion to privatise the ABC, no matter how vigorously repudiated by the government, is political poison, especially in regional, rural and remote Australia.

These voters have watched as the Abbott-Turnbull administrations have cut the ABC’s funding by $338 million since 2014. They have watched as the ABC has been used – in Guthrie’s words yesterday – as a punching bag by narrow political, commercial or ideological interests.

Read more: The politics behind the competitive neutrality inquiry into ABC and SBS

Guthrie was too diplomatic to nail the government or the Murdoch press. But the overt hostility to the ABC shown by the government over the past four years may now reap a political harvest.

That hostility has been demonstrated not only by the funding cuts but by sustained carping criticisms, vexatious complaints and political stunts exemplified by the current competitive neutrality inquiry.

It would be more accurately called the editorial neutering inquiry. Its focus is clearly on the ABC news service, as its own issues paper makes clear. That is the part of the ABC most detested by the government and the politician for whom the government is a cat’s paw in this, Pauline Hanson.

Each Tuesday, I engage in a pro-bono 25-minute segment on media issues with the presenter of ABC Radio Statewide Drive, Nicole Chvastek. The program is broadcast across regional Victoria and southern New South Wales, covering the National seats of Riverina, Mallee, Murray and Gippsland, and the Liberal seats of Farrer, Wannon, McMillan, Corangamite and McEwen.

Yesterday the talkback calls ran hot on this one issue: privatisation of the ABC. Yes, the ABC needed scrutiny; yes, the ABC was a bunch of lefties. But: where would we be without it?

Just after 5pm, the Nationals served up their deputy leader, the Victorian senator Bridget McKenzie, to answer talkback calls on this issue. It was like something from the Colosseum.

Authors: Denis Muller, Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Advancing Journalism, University of Melbourne

Read more http://theconversation.com/constant-attacks-on-the-abc-will-come-back-to-haunt-the-coalition-government-98456

What to Know Before Getting Dental Implants: A Guide for First-Time Patients

Dental implants Perth patients often look for a long-term solution for missing teeth without the hassle of dentures or bridges. If you are thinking ...

Why Protective Packaging Matters More Than Ever In Modern Shipping

In today’s fast-paced world of logistics and eCommerce, ensuring that products reach customers safely is a top priority. This is where a bubble wrap...

Pest Control Albury: Protecting Your Property From Hidden Damage And Health Risks

Pests rarely announce their arrival. They creep into spaces quietly, turning small, unnoticed corners into breeding grounds for bigger problems. Tha...

Why Root Canal Treatment Melbourne Is Essential For Saving Natural Teeth

Tooth pain has a way of demanding attention at the worst possible time. When the discomfort becomes persistent and intense, it often signals an infe...

How Bird Flight Diverters Help Protect Wildlife Around Power Infrastructure

Power infrastructure plays an essential role in modern life, but it can also create risks for wildlife, particularly birds moving through establishe...

What Businesses Should Look for in a Commercial Coffee Partner

Choosing a commercial coffee partner is not the same as choosing a machine. It is a broader decision that affects beverage quality, staff efficiency...

3PL Logistics Australia Driving Smarter Supply Chains And Faster Deliveries

In a world where customers expect speed almost as much as quality, logistics has become the silent heartbeat of every successful business. Behind th...

Why Professional Electrical Services Are Essential For Modern Properties

Electricity powers almost every aspect of daily life, from lighting and appliances to complex systems in homes and businesses. This makes choosing a...

What Not to Pack When Moving: The Essential Guide to Smart Packing

Moving house is one of those all-encompassing events in life and most people focus their energy on deciding what to pack. But knowing what not to pa...

From Assistance to Independence: Progression in Daily Living Skills

The ultimate goal of many support systems is to empower individuals to lead lives defined by autonomy and self-reliance. While some support requiremen...

The Cost Difference Between Early Repairs and Delayed Replacement

Automotive maintenance often involves a choice between addressing a small issue immediately or waiting until a component fails completely. When it c...

What Is a Stainless Steel Bar? Applications, Benefits, and Buying Tips

Stainless steel is one of the most widely used materials across industrial and commercial sectors, known for its strength, corrosion resistance, and...

Scholars in Developing Nations Depending on Z library

Access to books often shapes the course of study for scholars who live in regions with thin library shelves and slow supply chains. Many students wo...

6 Cheapest POS Systems in Australia (2026)

The cheapest POS systems in Australia for 2026 are POSApt, Square, Zeller, Loyverse, Epos Now, and Shopify POS (Lite). However, “cheap” does no...

The Ultimate Guide to Automating Your Weekend Yard Chores

We all look forward to the weekend as a chance to unwind after a long week of work. You probably picture yourself relaxing on the patio with a cold ...

How Ignoring Regular Car Servicing Can Lead to Costly Repairs

Owning a car gives you a sweet sense of freedom and comfort. You can go wherever you want, whenever you want. But with that freedom comes responsibili...

Someone Trips at Your Fundraiser. Now What? Understanding Public Liability for NFPs

Three months of planning. Volunteers giving up their weekends. Sponsorships chased, catering sorted, tables decorated. And then, about an hour into ...

Stainless Steel Tube: A Complete Specification Guide for Engineers, Project Managers, and Industrial Buyers

Few materials in the industrial and manufacturing world are as universally relied upon — or as frequently misspecified — as stainless steel tube...