Murdoch flexes his muscles
Murdoch’s newspapers go ballistic against PM Kevin Rudd ahead of the Australian elections,
writes MAYA RANGANATHAN
Posted/Updated
Saturday, Aug 10 13:00:08, 2013
Much
like the Mumbai restaurateur Srinivas Shetty, who chose to register his
protest against tax on the bill he gave his customers, a co-owner of a
cafe´ ‘Slightly Twisted Refreshments’, in the northern Brisbane suburb
of Nundah in Queensland, has posted a sign in the cafe´ that has gone
viral on social media.
In
the week that was, when the Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd set
the date of elections as September 7, a hotly-debated issue on and
offline has been the headlines in the front page of Rupert Murdoch-owned
News Corporation’s Daily Telegraph published in Sydney. On the opening
day of the election campaign it screamed ‘Kick this Mob Out’. On Aug 8, the front page
depicted Rudd, Deputy Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Craig Thomson
as characters from the 1960s era TV show, Hogan’s Heroes, the 60s CBS
show set in a German Prisoner of War camp in World War II. (In the
series, Colonel Hogan manipulates Klink and gets Schultz to look ignore
Allied forces’ ‘secret operations’) Even if Rudd’s daughter made light of the depiction, the association to Nazis was not lost to readers.
The
oligopolistic competition in the Australian media, particularly the
print media, has been the subject of much academic scrutiny. There are
two national and 10 state/territory daily newspapers, 37 regional
dailies and 470 other regional and suburban newspapers. All the major
newspapers are owned either by News Limited, a subsidiary of Murdoch’s
News Corporation (founded in Adelaide but now based in the United
States), or Fairfax Media. PM Rudd’s statement in a press conference
that Murdoch owns 70 per cent of newspapers in Australia may be
factually incorrect, as News Corp has clarified that it accounts for
only 33% of the newspaper titles that have “sales audited by the Audit
Bureau of Circulation.” But considering that News Corp owns a number of
small, local publications, Murdoch’s reach is indeed phenomenal. It has
been pointed out that
“News Corp Australia titles account for 59% of the sales of all daily
newspapers, with sales of 17.3m papers a week, making it Australia's
most influential newspaper publisher by a considerable margin.” And in
the capital cities News Corporation titles accounted for 65% of
circulation in 2011 with Fairfax Media, controlling 25%.
Murdoch’s
use of his media for political manoeuvring is well-known. In 1992, his
UK tabloid The Sun took credit for the Conservative Party victory. It
has been reported that following the formation of the minority Labor
government in Australia in 2010, Murdoch made it clear to the editors of
his Australian newspapers that he wanted the Labor government out at
all costs. In 2011, he supposedly met Liberal Party leader Tony Abbott
and offered support. The reasons offered for Murdoch’s current position
are interesting. Paul Sheehan, a columnist
in the Sydney Morning Herald argued that this was a calculative
business man in action. The Labor government’s building of the National
Broadband Network (NBN) has caused alarm bells to ring as “the quick
downloading of movies and other content would be a threat to Murdoch's
Foxtel TV operation,” he argued. It is worth noting that the
Opposition’s plans for a national broadband are less ambitious. Rudd
himself has said that the rollout of the National Broadband Network
would pose “a commercial threat to Foxtel” (Foxtel cable television is a
monopoly jointly owned with Telstra) and has called for Tony Abbot to come clean on
‘discussions’ with the Media Moghul on the broadband policy. Murdoch
clarified on Twitter that he had no issues with the NBN. “We all like
idea of NBN, especially perfect for Foxtel. But how can it be financed
in present situation?”
This
line of reasoning for Murdoch’s animosity to Labor may well be
simplistic as, if commercial gain was the only imperative, it makes
little sense for Murdoch to hold on to loss-making newspapers like The
Australian, The New York Post or The Times. In 2012, it was reported
that The Australian was losing more than $25 million a year. The second
reason offered for Murdoch’s dislike of the Labor party, the supposed
fear that a Labor regime would tighten press regulations eventually
leading to a restriction of editorial freedoms, seems more valid. One
can only conclude that Murdoch is keen on exerting an influence on
Australian politics and perhaps, succeed in ways he could not in the US.
Murdoch’s
operations in Australia are currently led by Col Allan, nicknamed ‘Col
Pot’after the Cambodian dictator, a trusted lieutenant of Murdoch
associated with The Daily Telegraph and The New York Post.
The agenda became clear soon after Col Allan’s arrival in Australia on
July 29, from the headlines in the papers from the News Corp stable. On
Aug 3, one of the headlines on the national daily The Australian read: The $250bn cost of Kevin Rudd: a tale of waste and spending; in Sydney’s The Daily Telegraph it was: Price of Labor - another huge budget shambles … and now we're $30bn in the red and in Melbourne’s Herald Sun it was simply: It's a Ruddy mess.
The
Rudd-bashing however, has led to criticisms that the Murdoch empire is
‘turning on itself’ in an effort to win Murdoch’s attention and not take
on the competition. Based on the market values of News Corp, a $3.57
billion listed company, the Financial Review on Aug 9 commented
that News Corp showed every sign of “a deeply dysfunctional
corporation,” with Col Allan trying to usher in old practices instead of
looking to the future at a time when digitial technologies are sounding
the death knell of the print medium.
Meanwhile, the Press Council
has received 77 objections to the ‘Kick the mob out’ article and 19
objections to the parody of the Hogan’s Heroes’ show. Much like in the
case of the Parel restaurateur, the Brisbane cafe-owner’s message has
gone viral. But contrary to the experience of the Indian restaurateur,
no political party supporters have coming knocking on his doors. While
people have been more than supportive of the decision much to the
surprise of the owner himself, he is not without detractors. He has come
in for criticism for doing “exact same thing as Rupert Murdoch,” that
is “only promoting his own view.”
http://www.thehoot.org/web/Murdoch-flexes-his-muscles/6953-1-1-1-true.html
http://www.thehoot.org/web/Murdoch-flexes-his-muscles/6953-1-1-1-true.html
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