Is the ABC being prepared for privatisation?

By December 5, 2017Australian Politics, Society

The Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) is a right wing ‘think tank’ which is in essence a lobby group for big business. It has provided a significant number of members of parliament for the Liberal Party, National Party and Liberal Democratic Party, while some other members have links to the organisation. Such members include Tony Abbott, Eric Abetz, Simon Birmingham, Michaelia Cash, George Christensen, Mathias Cormann, Mitch Fifield, Josh Frydenberg, David Leyonhjelm, Ian MacDonald, James McGrath, Scott Morrison, Kelly O’Dwyer, James Paterson, Scott Ryan, Tony Smith, Alan Tudge and Tim Wilson1,2. It is therefore not surprising that the IPA’s manifesto has strongly influenced that of the Coalition government.

Other people linked to the IPA include columnist for ‘the Australian’, Janet Albrechtsen, commentator Tom Switzer and mining billionaire (and Barnaby Joyce benefactor) Gina Rinehart3.

Given that some of the biggest donors to the IPA are fossil fuel companies, the organisation denies the fact of human induced climate change. It is not surprising that many of the IPA-linked politicians are also climate change deniers4. In the past, some of the IPA’s donors have been tobacco companies, so the IPA fought against plain-packaging of cigarettes3. It would be interesting to see how many of the IPA affiliated politicians would overturn plain packaging if given a chance. Indeed, given their bizarre behaviour over climate change, it makes you wonder if any still believe tobacco is harmless.

One of the IPA ‘policy initiatives’ they have put forward for years is that the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) should be privatised3. For years the Coalition have been whining about perceived bias of the ABC. They do not do it now because the ABC is in the process of being tamed. Apparently, the first step in this process was to install former Murdoch employee, Michelle Guthrie. She seems to be attempting to ‘dumb down’ the organisation by getting rid of  or abbreviating several current affairs programmes, although she did say that there will be a dedicated and substantial investigative unit, which will be a cross-platform unit5. While this sounds excellent and may work, it is a smoke-screen, and is simply a way of decreasing the attention paid to short-term political and economic issues. As such, the hard questions to politicians about day-to-day politics will likely disappear. It is perhaps pertinent that you never hear any in the Coalition now complaining of bias from the ABC. That is because now it is widely perceived that there is a bias towards the government, something about which they are quite happy.

While privatising the ABC would be a difficult sell for the Coalition, particularly in the bush, the government and its IPA hacks will eventually attempt to do so. They may continue to use the standard neoliberal technique; you underfund a government function, the public becomes dissatisfied with its performance, the government then outsources parts of the functions one at a time until it is all gone. The damage done to the ABC is already significant; to lose it completely would be devastating for our democracy. Those who wish it to be privatised are not interested in democracy, all they want is power with as little accountability as possible.

Sources

  1. https://independentaustralia.net/politics/politics-display/the-liberal-party-and-the-institute-of-public-affairs-who-is-whose,8837#.VykwQgnKmHY.twitter
  2. https://twitter.com/IPAexposed
  3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institute_of_Public_Affairs
  4. http://www.blotreport.com/australian-politics/climate-change-deniers-in-parliament/
  5. http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/tv-and-radio/the-news-is-sad-for-abc-viewers-under-michelle-guthries-rule-20171009-gywwmj.html
  6. http://www.blotreport.com/australian-politics/government-money-laundering/

 

5 Comments

  • Jon says:

    After today’s revelations re Genevieve Jacobs’ sacking from 666 it seems the sanitisation is already well underway. She was the one bright light in a blancmange of mediocrity on local AM radio. Her IQ/EQ and inquisitive mind already had her well ahead of her lightweight, vanilla colleagues but the thing which really made her a huge asset to this community was that she was always well informed about her topics and hence was able to ask the right questions. And she didn’t shirk that task irrespective of who she was interviewing.

    • admin says:

      Jon,
      You can definitely see it progressing, as demonstrated by the free rides given to Joyce over his horizontal folk dancing with a staffer, and Turnbull claiming victory in the #SSM vote. The ABC is in the process of being Guthried.

  • John Nicol says:

    Unless the ABC does something about its very narrow selection criteria for staff whose commentary on both news and opinion is full of opinion and very little news, the clamour for its privatisation can only grow. As avid listeners and watchers of the ABC the last twenty years has seen our loyalty to it falter to the point where it seems that it has no justification for the $1.1 bn of taxpayers money which it consumes. Efficiency seems to be a dirty word at Auntie – the six employees who it takes to produce the quite stupid and usually nauseating Media Watch, the parallel programming of SBS and Channel 2 where really good programmes on one are nearly always run at the same time as the best programmes on the other rather than in sequence.. The paucity of humour shows – by this I mean shows which actually make you laugh such as we used to enjoy – not the stupid childish stuff dished up by Australians whose jokes are noin-existence and vulgarity and swearling is supposed to be enjoyed.

    Time to move on and either remove the ABC or sack all of its current staff and replace with a new band of politically balanced people.

    • admin says:

      John,
      I disagree entirely with you and I still almost to the complete exclusion of commercial television watch ABC and SBS. This is mostly because what is on the commercial channels is dross at best. The technique the coalition uses to make people like you, or as you profess to be, dissatisfied with the ABC is to underfund it, so the dissatisfaction level rises, then they can more easily break it up and ‘privatise’ it, and turn all television into dross, which is what they want. That technique is being used on Centrelink, which is slowly being privatised by stealth, by hiving off functions and increasing the dissatisfaction level. These functions are of course hived off to corporations who donate to the Coalition parties. It is simple money laundering.

    • admin says:

      John,
      I just googled you and realise that you are a climate change denier. That is wacky, believing that all the various organisations all around the world are involved in a huge conspiracy.

Leave a Reply to Jon Cancel Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Bitnami