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The role of the BBC and other broadcasters in UK referendums. Presented by Nigel Smith, VoxScot in Tel Aviv, 21 st April 2004. Preface. I have no experience of restricted constituency referendums like the Nationalist Party in SA or the current one in the Likud party.
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The role of the BBC and other broadcasters in UK referendums Presented by Nigel Smith, VoxScot in Tel Aviv, 21st April 2004
Preface • I have no experience of restricted constituency referendums like the Nationalist Party in SA or the current one in the Likud party. • a UK Party referendum would certainly present a new challenge to British broadcasters • But most likely treat it some special way along the lines I am going to explain • RTE and BBC lead public service broadcasters • 8 major in UK and over 30 in Ireland • still evolving
What do I mean by a referendum? • Fairly conducted In a modern democracy • Dealing with a major issue • No contending elections or referendums • Allowing a Single issue debate • Then the median vote decides
Opinion formation in referendums • Enough time for fair debate • Adequate information • Better after foundation political event • Early and late deciders • Media coverage spills out • Intellectual or intuitive decision • TV especially important
List 25 major referendums …. • And what happened in the campaigns
Referendum Campaigns work • May consolidate opinion • More often changes opinion • Swings usually more than in elections • Introduce a note of caution about change
The principal channels of communication • Newspapers • Broadcasting • Word of mouth - intermediated by above • Other means inc direct official mailings
Newspapers in referendums • Most will have an editorial preference • Many will cover both sides but unequally • Some will propagandise for only one side Result Many voters excluded from fair debate
Media law & Regulation • Broadly same media law & regulation • Except Broadcasting required • to be “fair and impartial” newspapers need not • Not just in referendums but all the time Result • Voters 4 or 5 times more likely to “trust” the information from Broadcasters
Broadcasters in referendums • No editorial position • Duty to strike an 50:50 balance • between sides not between political parties • In effect the rules of “fair & impartial” are tightened in a referendum
Types of referendum broadcasting • Political advertising • Sponsored programmes • Neutral Commission & Participation ads • Free Referendum campaign broadcasts • General coverage
First the 50:50 rule in General coverage • Equality of opportunity not of effect • Bad presentation wastes the opportunity • Balance is subjective professional judgement • Not decided by stop watch though it may inform decisions • Each programme strand must strike the balance over a month initially then over a week
Specific practical issues • Polls & stats • Voxpops & emails • Panels and audiences • Contributors & decliners • Independent experts • Upping profiles • Active campaigners • Presentation Versus Debates
Specific problems • Countering News value of PM and Cabinet • Role of Government machine & taxpayers money • Desire of media to make exciting programmes • Tendency to use established politicians • Risk of top slicing • Despite these problems • It works … UK broadcasters broadly give us fair referendums