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Diamond Jubilee: A Bad Few Days for Journalism

Posted: 08/06/2012 00:00

Judging from the media coverage of the Diamond Jubilee celebrations you'd think that the entire British population are ardent monarchists. Critical, dissenting voices were mostly ignored and sidelined. Journalistic balance and impartiality was supplanted in favour of fawning sycophancy towards the royals.

The media is not in the pay of Buckingham Palace spin doctors but many of them acted as though they are. No doubt about it, the monarchy scored a sensational public relations coup; largely thanks to most reporters discarding their normal standards of objectivity.

While I am glad that millions of people enjoyed the celebrations - and that hard-working Britons received a much-deserved extra day's holiday - I see no reason why the media coverage should not have included alternative viewpoints about the ethics and efficacy of the monarchical system.

True, republicans are a minority. But in a democracy, minority opinions should be allowed and be heard. Indeed, one the hallmarks of a democracy is the facilitation of dissenting, questioning perspectives.

The entire history of social progress in this country has been one in which minorities challenged the prevailing consensus. Centuries ago, for example, only a handful of so-called 'extremists' wanted to abolish slavery or give votes to women. It's always the case that the democratic reforms we now take for granted started out as marginalised, fringe ideas. This will no doubt be the case with regard to the republican bid for an elected head of state. Eventually, reason and morality will prevail. Future generations will look back in amazement that as late as the early 21st century most British people lauded the elitism and privilege of royalty.

The royal family still enjoy many of the trappings of feudal extravagance. They have over 700 servants and nine royal palaces and residences; which is far more than they need or deserve. Estimates of the Queen's personal, private wealth vary from £310 million to nearly £4 billion. Yet the royals are subsidised by the taxpayer at a time of extreme financial hardship for millions. It doesn't seem fair.

Journalists and politicians heaped praise on the Queen's "distinguished", "unblemished" and "exemplary" 60-year reign. While she has not been embroiled in any major scandals, like those that have engulfed heads of state in many other countries, her time on the Throne has not been without its flaws and failings. The media chose to ignore and suppress these shortcomings from its Diamond Jubilee reportage, in clear dereliction of its duty of balance.

Only last month, the Queen hosted seven royal dictators at Windsor Castle, including the blood-stained tyrants from Saudi Arabia and Bahrain who have violently suppressed peaceful pro-democracy protests. The invitation list was, according to the Foreign Office, drawn up by Buckingham Palace. These invitations to despots were completely unnecessary and unjustified. They were an insult to the many victims of detention without trial, torture and executions. The Queen appeared to put loyalty to fellow royals before human rights.

Going back in time to 1975, the Queen's representative in Australia, the Governor-General, dismissed the democratically-elected left-wing Labor government of Gough Whitlam. It was, in effect, a coup d'etat. It seems hard to believe that the Queen was not informed in advance that the royal powers, as head of state of Australia, exercised through the office of the Governor-General, were not going to be used in this way.

The Palace doesn't have a very good record as an employer. Most staff are not well paid. Royal service is, apparently, deemed to be a reward in itself. Historically, the Royal households were not an equal opportunities employer. Until the 1980s, it has been said that there were few black or Asian staff and relatively few women. The Grenadier Guards and Royal Household Cavalry remained all white. Not a single black face. This appeared to change only after a public furore.

Elizabeth II employs gay men. She apparently likes well-groomed, well-mannered male servants. However, until protests by the LGBT rights group OutRage! outside Buckingham Palace in 1996, gay staff were allegedly forbidden to bring their partners to the Christmas Ball, while heterosexual staff were encouraged to do so.

The honours system is cheapened by the persistent rewarding of undeserving royal favourites. Some honours are within the monarch's personal gift and are not based on recommendations from the Prime Minister and the Honours Secretariat. There have in recent years been prestigious honours for the Queen's pastry chef and gardener, among others. They have done nothing honourable or exceptional and do not merit such awards.

One startling misjudgement by the Queen during her Diamond Jubliee celebrations was the absence of any publicly known beneficence towards the British people. Despite her immense private wealth, and unlike some previous monarchs, no civic legacy was offered - no funding of a school, hospital, museum, library or other public institution to benefit the population.

This absence of a tangible public gift from the Palace by way of commemoration of the Queen's 60 years on the throne is curious and disappointing. Whereas earlier kings and queens might have bequeathed a royal estate or castle to the nation on such an occasion, this Jubilee has so far offered nothing. She may be many things, but Elizabeth II does not appear to be generous to the public.

Royalty represents the acme of the class system - a system of privilege, snobbery and deference, which is totally out of step with modern democratic, meritocratic Britain. It is a hangover from feudalism. The way people today are still expected to bow and curtsey to the monarch symbolises the insulting arrogance and elitism of royalty.

Monarchy is also fundamentally incompatible with democracy. The highest public office in the land - head of state - should not be an inherited position. It should be open to all and based on merit, character and democratic election. The Queen would be welcome to stand for the post. If she won, which she might, I'd accept the result. She'd have a democratic mandate. Let the people decide.

Were any of these ideas and issues ventilated by the media in the run up to, or during, the Diamond Jubliee? Sadly not. It was the perfect moment for a polite, considered discussion of such matters but it never happened. All we had from most journalists was unfettered eulogy.

This is bad for democracy. Our state institutions work better when they are subjected to critical scrutiny and analysis. Unfortunately, much of the media failed the public. Instead of allowing democrats to tell truth to power, too many journalists played the role of servile cyphers for royal propaganda. Overall, a bad few days for journalistic standards.

More information about Peter Tatchell's campaigns: www.PeterTatchell.net and about republic: www.Republic.org.uk

 
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Judging from the media coverage of the Diamond Jubilee celebrations you'd think that the entire British population are ardent monarchists. Critical, dissenting voices were mostly ignored and sidelined...
Judging from the media coverage of the Diamond Jubilee celebrations you'd think that the entire British population are ardent monarchists. Critical, dissenting voices were mostly ignored and sidelined...
 
 
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12:19 PM on 06/14/2012
Great article - here's the suggestion that SolentHousing made for how the Queen could do some good in her big year:

The Daily Express is at it again – highlighting the scandal of a large family of east European origins that is living in a mansion in the most expensive part of London at the taxpayers’ expense. But to be fair to the Royal Family, spending your entire life opening sheltered housing schemes and shaking hands with foreign despots is some justification for having a pile of mansions and castles to live in. In fact it's enough to drive you to shoot furry creatures and birds at the weekend, so the big back gardens make sense, too.

The Jubilee did get us thinking about ways in which the Windsors could do their bit during the recession. Our best suggestion is to lease Buckingham Palace to Marriott Hotels and use huge amount of income it would generate to restart the housebuilding economy. Providing outrageously priced bedrooms for wealthy tourists rather than one family would surely increase the numbers employed in the Palace. Let’s face it, the building has very little architectural merit whereas Windsor Castle is an absolute gem and is a lot closer to the shops and chemists. It’s also easier to defend (the clue is in the name) and one less home to manage also means that Her Maj could be less vulnerable to the bedroom tax. Everybody wins and it might add some credibility to the national housing
07:31 PM on 06/12/2012
well from the TV coverage one would think everyone LOVEs football and Reality shows !!! so why pick out the jouous occasion to air your spite !!
09:43 AM on 06/10/2012
after reading this article i think mr tatchell should take note of over 1.5 million people lining the mall last tuesday and the turnout at the street parties around the country we dont need a president in this country i much prefer the head of state being totally above the political process and can give advice to the prime minster from an independent prospective
if you look at the countries that have a president as head of state they are worse off for it the examples include zimbabwe uganda argentina but to name a few and the other countries where when a president is elected like zimbabwe they decide that the democratic process should be surplanted by their rules and not democratic rules so they can keep power to themselves and keep it among the top 1% of their populatation in this country everyone gets the chance to improve themselves and get rich
11:14 AM on 06/10/2012
Quote: "if you look at the countries that have a president as head of state they are worse off for it"

So what do you think of the head of state of Swaziland, King Mswati III or the King of Saudi Arabia? Selecting a few bad apples and claiming that they typify all presidential systems is a pretty pathetic argument.

Monarchies are just as capable of producing tyrants as republics.
02:30 PM on 06/10/2012
1.5 million lining the mall. A large number of those will have been foreign tourists who seemed to be fascinated with the bizarre spectacle. And what street parties?? The biased BBC showed a few gatherings in some snobby little villages. But back in the real world and in the normal working class town in Yorkshire I live in there were no parties, no flags and no bunting. As normal people dont feel a connection to an old woman who has lived in luxury for 60 years and never done a days work. Going on numerous free holidays and waving a lot to me does not constitute serving your country.
03:51 PM on 06/10/2012
so in youre opinion that all the street parties in the country were in snobby little villages well i dont live in a snobby village but a rather large town and to my knowledge my town had over 20 parties plus also i know that croydon had several parties and i know several friends around the country had street parties
maybe youre village didnt have a street party because nobody could be bothered to organise it i assume that if you werent celebrating you didnt take the extra bank holiday off and went to work that day but then you must have sat through all the coverage that day from the bbc to get such an opinion that it was so biased but this was a day to celebrate 60 yrs of the queen on the throne now i realise that in youre opinion the queen never does a days work but obviously you know her exact itinery for everyday she has been on the throne

i do agree that a few foreign people were in the mall but i think you will find that the majority were british people as i dont believe there would be more than 2% were foreigners

but maybe the bbc showed certain gatherings because these people were happy to be seen on telly
07:33 PM on 06/12/2012
oh dear time you dropped out of the Human race !!
01:40 PM on 06/09/2012
Tatchell to the Tower I say. No just kidding send him back to Australia the country where his sentiments might chime rather more favourably. HM could always give Oz away,maybe she will in good time. Then they can elect a Skippy!
Hereditary monarchy as Head of State is perhaps the worst way to choose a HofS but it is without exception the best of all the other forms that have been tried from time to time.
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Gods own child
Weapons legitimise a regime
09:32 AM on 06/09/2012
Well done Peter, let's have it on prime time, oh sure. The idea of a monarchy/ religion etc is a vital component of tyranny, where the infantalisation of the ordinary people is necessary to keep all where they are. The few minutes of coverage I myself could stomach depicted only too clearly the mindless and blind grovelling of the idolators to a false god that has done absolutely nothing for them but send it's children to wars for the age old reasons. They will argue that we all enjoy the benefit of this looting, well there are plenty of other ways that don't entail the murders of war, and the deliberate division of the human race.
07:34 PM on 06/12/2012
wow Karl M is alive and well !!!!
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Gods own child
Weapons legitimise a regime
06:32 AM on 06/13/2012
Thanks gordonsewell,
08:45 AM on 06/13/2012
why "deserved "extra days holiday? for what!!! and I am sorry to tell you that my comment on K M was sarcastic NOT complimentary !!
01:59 AM on 06/09/2012
Would,or could someone explain how an elected head of state would be an improvement on the present system.Would he/she have the same powers as the monarch,be a non political figurehead or have executive power?I think the latter would be a non starter,and the former we already have.
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Gods own child
Weapons legitimise a regime
09:57 AM on 06/09/2012
If you think that the royal family have no political power, you must live on a tiny Pacific island. The current royal family hide behind the luxury of political anonymity while undoubtedly instructing Her majesty's government on how to manage what they regard as their country. This is backed by The Royal Air Force, The Royal Navy, The Queen's own regiment etc. If a challenge to this status quo occurs, you will see in Britain what is happening in Syria etc, bet your life. History has shown this time and again, but oh, we live in the 21st century don't we.
Best wishes.
11:42 AM on 06/09/2012
You jump the gun. Head of State is a non-trivial appointment and In a democracy there should be a choice made by the people. The British have not been given a choice. An opinion poll is not enough for the same reason that it does not replace a general election. If the Brits want a monarchy OK but let them speak.
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Paul Wagland
Resistance is fertile
10:29 PM on 06/08/2012
Thanks for the rational viewpoint. It's frustrating being surrounded by so many weak-minded but vocal sheeple. Power by birth is so obviously wrong I can barely be bothered to condemn it,.
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jacksdad41
Quant Je Puis
10:49 PM on 06/08/2012
Yet you choose to in your inimitable cringeworthy style. Power by birth I agree is wrong but do tell, how can anyone choose where to be born? Your thinly veiled attacks are now becoming ad hominem Mr Wagland - calm down and take the dog for a walk followed by an early night. I am sure you will feel much better in the morning. It really is not worth getting worked up about.
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Paul Wagland
Resistance is fertile
11:06 PM on 06/08/2012
I'm not sure you know what ad hominem means. An example would be "your inimitable cringeworthy style".
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Gods own child
Weapons legitimise a regime
01:32 PM on 06/09/2012
More hairsplitting jacksdad41,No one can choose where they are born or what into, but most can choose whether to stay there or not. We can't choose to move into Buckingham palace if we want, but the royals can move away from what they are whenever they want, however imprisoned they feel by it.
There may be more examples of stepping down, but the most exemplary I can think of in recent times is Viscount Stansgate. Best wishes.
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08:52 PM on 06/08/2012
Ha! It would seem jacksdad41 cannot cope with opposing viewpoint - why else the personal abuse?
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jacksdad41
Quant Je Puis
08:59 PM on 06/08/2012
Au contraire @domdeesy - out of 26 posts I make the point that the majority of them are in praise of Gary Tatchell - what is personal about that? You cry sycophancy at the support of our well loved Queen - I am simply returning the compliment of the majoritys support for their Queen. Do keep up.
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09:26 PM on 06/08/2012
"I am simply returning the compliment of the majority's support for their Queen. Do keep up."

QED.
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jacksdad41
Quant Je Puis
09:16 PM on 06/08/2012
It may have been that there was a different "protest" that day at some other venue - the dyslexic anti monarchists may have attended the meeting as set out by the writer of the headline " Diamond Jubliee" - there may have been millions at the West Bank - Gaza.
08:01 PM on 06/08/2012
On Sunday 3 June, during the Queen's flotilla, only 100 hundred pro-republicans were allowed to protest on the bank of the River Thames. Hundreds more were blocked from reaching the previously police-approved demonstration area. While the media gave endless saturation coverage to every minutae of the royals and to every tit-bit of regal trivia, they failed to report this stymying of the right to protest. Shameful.
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jacksdad41
Quant Je Puis
08:43 PM on 06/08/2012
Were you there to confirm that or can you provide a reliable source to this piece of information? Nowhere have I read the numbers were subject to any maximum. Indeed none of the Republican posters who I have corresponded with either before or after the event have mentioned the police had insisted on a maximum number of protestors.
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Paul Wagland
Resistance is fertile
10:23 PM on 06/08/2012
Were you there to deny? Or did you just suck-up the BBC drivel?
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jacksdad41
Quant Je Puis
09:02 PM on 06/08/2012
I can answer part of my own question - I understand you were there on the day but there is no evidence from any source (even Al jazeera covered it) that a maximum number was placed on the republican anti monarchy group.
12:24 AM on 06/09/2012
I was there and even though I was a speaker at the police-sanctioned Republic protest by City Hall I was turned away. I had to go to three different police barriers before I was allowed in (and then only because I was a speaker). I saw several hundred pro-Republic protesters refused entry to the agreed protest site. They were kept away from City Hall, and forced to rally instead in Tooley Street, in clear violation of the agreement with the police. The fact that you did not read about this denial of the right to protest is proof of the biased media reporting that I was complaining about.
04:15 PM on 06/08/2012
"Royalty represents the acme of the class system - a system of privilege, snobbery and deference, which is totally out of step with modern democratic, meritocratic Britain. It is a hangover from feudalism. The way people today are still expected to bow and curtsey to the monarch symbolises the insulting arrogance and elitism of royalty. Were any of these ideas and issues ventilated by the media in the run up to, or during, the Diamond Jubliee? Sadly not. It was the perfect moment for a polite, considered discussion of such matters but it never happened. All we had from most journalists was unfettered eulogy. "

Luckily you are here to redress the balance Peter, more power to you.
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03:04 PM on 06/08/2012
Excellent article, Peter - well said!

What a thoroughly sickmaking and cringeworthy weekend it was.
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03:01 PM on 06/08/2012
Excellent article,Peter!
A truly cringemaking weekend.
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Thismortalcoil
Science is the poetry of reality
12:56 PM on 06/08/2012
As always Peter you speak great sense.

The royal family is on the wrong side of history. How in this day and age can we still teach our children that they have to bow and scrape to certain individuals just because they happened to be born in a certain family?

I've read that between 20 to 40% of people do not support the monarchy - this has certainly not reflected in the press coverage. I know a lot of people who were happy to have a day off, and who even enjoyed street parties with their friends and neighbours, but who would vote the queen out tomorrow given half a chance.
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Ben Wilson
What's the story mourning Tories?
12:41 PM on 06/08/2012
I'm glad the Republicans found it hard to get a platform over the weekend, not that it has stopped them from trying to pile on the misery during most peoples efforts to just have a good time. They have the rest of their lives to loan in what ever manner they wish. Some did go out and protest the queen the BBC covered them as the crowds waiting for the Queen drowned them out. However like the westboro Baptist church, there's a time and place and anyone who tries to bring the mood down during happy or somber times is any number of 4 letter words.
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Gods own child
Weapons legitimise a regime
12:56 PM on 06/09/2012
anyone who tries to bring the mood down during happy or somber times is any number of 4 letter words.
You might like to use this line in reference to the Peterloo massacre.
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Ben Wilson
What's the story mourning Tories?
06:29 PM on 06/09/2012
So that voids the whole arguement does it? I don't quite see the validity in the point you're making, butfor the sake of arguement, still, there's always an exception to a rule, two wrongs don't make a right and laying on guilt from an unrelated source to get people to alter their view is lame.
12:37 PM on 06/08/2012
A well written and presented piece Peter. I'm a republican through and through and was saddened, and disgusted, by the reporting of this event by people who apparently disengage their brains when the chance of a gong is the prize. Nobody is better than me or my family just because they were born to the right family. The whole notion of monarchy is abhorrent.