
“The Primary
Freedom of the Press lies in not being a Trade”
(Karl Marx, Rheinische Zeitung, May 1842.) ]
“Freedom of the press belongs to those who own one” (Anon)
For the last twenty years there has been increasing public awareness
that journalistic integrity and the capitalist press are uneasy
bedfellows. Various writers, particularly in America, have highlighted
the incompatibility between a supposedly ‘free press’ and the
production of a newspaper as a commodity for profit. Those who have
criticised the press have every right to be scornful. But this is no
breakthrough in investigative journalism; capitalism has always
corrupted the press and led to it functioning as a mouthpiece for the
ruling class, a point explosively demonstrated by Upton Sinclair in
1919 when he first published The Brass Check (republished by University
of Illinois Press in 2002). In a timeless and scathing attack on the
capitalist press Sinclair asserted “that American journalism is a class
institution serving the rich and spurning the poor”, likening the
journalist to a prostitute, enslaved in the business ideology of the
owning class and functioning to work hand in glove with political
leaders and big business to deceive public opinion.
Brass Check was written in the ‘Progressive Era’ at the beginning of
the 20th century, a period that saw large swathes of US industry come
under the sway of immensely powerful inter-linking monopolistic
corporations controlled by a highly concentrated elite of powerful
owners. The monopolistic ownership of the newspaper industry that
spawned a new journalistic style that trivialised and sensationalised
news, abandoning journalistic integrity and independence, caused
particular outrage and was branded ‘yellow journalism’. But the
essence of this condemnation was more seditious than a simple dispute
over the presentation of newsprint. Critics argued that the newspaper
monopoly strangled public awareness, censored all anti-business opinion
and now served solely to express the owner’s class interests that
operated, in Sinclair’s words, for the “hoodwinking of the public and
the plunder of labour”. The press, it was argued, must be
cleansed of corrupting class bias and function as a neutral conduit for
the communication of meaningful information enabling the public to
exercise informed democratic preferences.
Capitalist business
In Britain, a similar concentration of ownership had already
dramatically altered the newspaper industry that stifled and later
decimated the popular press. During the first half of the 19th century
Britain had enjoyed a thriving and vigorous popular press that
criticised appalling working conditions and was spurred on by the
‘betrayal’ of the 1832 Reform Act and anger at the 1834 Poor Law.
The radical press produced numerous papers that “promoted greater
collective confidence by repeatedly emphasising the potential power of
working people to effect social change through the force of
‘combination’ and organised action” (James Curren and Jean Seaton,
Power Without Responsibility: The Press and Broadcasting in Britain,
p.24). The radical press was a major source of antagonism to government
and the propertied class but neither libel actions nor stamp tax on
newsprint were effective in subjugating it. Nevertheless, by 1865 the
radical press was in decline, broken not by laws but by a combination
of rising costs and market forces.
By the second half of the 19th century the rising cost of printing
technology to support national newspaper circulation required major
investment. Newspaper set-up costs in Britain rose from £1,000 to
over £50,000 between 1840 and 1870 while in America these capital
costs rose by 600 percent between 1855 and 1875, a huge investment that
excluded all but the extremely wealthy. In addition to rising costs,
the growing importance of advertising in Britain greatly disadvantaged
the alternative press because successful advertising meant appealing to
people who had money. The readers of the radical press were mainly
working people on low incomes and advertisers discriminated against
these newspapers because “their readers are not purchasers, and any
money thrown upon them is so much money thrown away” (quotation from
1856, in James Curren and Jean Seaton, p.43). Advertising revenue acted
as a subsidy enabling newspapers to be sold at a price below the cost
of production and, once exposed to the realism of commercial
capitalism, competitors without advertising revenue were forced from
the market or sufficiently weakened to be taken over by larger
companies. Newspaper production had become a capitalist business.
Sinclair too identified advertising as a main corrupting agent enabling
wealthy advertisers to drive-out the US radical press and exert
pressure on editors to mould content and editorial comment. “Everywhere
in the world of journalism, high and low, you see this power of the
advertiser,” Sinclair declared at a time when advertising, accounting
for two-thirds of US newspaper income, greatly enhanced the
concentration of ownership. Little has changed in an industry that
allows little opportunity for new entrants to enter the market. Today,
twenty-four inter-linking US corporations control over half of
newspapers and most magazines, broadcasting, books and movies, while
Britain is reputed to have the most highly concentrated newspaper
ownership in the world, being dominated by five immense corporate
groups.
Newspapers must appeal to wealthy corporations as a platform for
advertising and to a readership with sufficient purchasing power to
satisfy the advertisers’ selling aspirations. Making a newspaper
attractive to advertisers is achieved by altering content to suit the
values and prejudices of those who pay advertising revenues, as was
pointed out in 1910 by US Professor Edward Ross: “When the news-columns
and editorial page are a mere incident in the profitable sale of
mercantile publicity, in it is strictly ‘businesslike’ to let the big
advertisers censor both”(cited by Robert McChesney and Ben Scott,
Monthly Review, www.monthlyreview.org/0502rwmscott.htm May 2002) A
newspaper boasting a large circulation but lacking content that
appeals to advertisers will rarely survive, a fact that provides an
explanation for the disappearance of ‘labour news’ and the widespread
growth of lucrative ‘business news’ aimed at a minority audience. The
demise of the Daily Herald and Sunday Citizen in the 1960s also
illustrate the point. In its final year the Daily Herald enjoyed 8
percent of daily circulation but attracted only 3 percent of the net
advertising revenue while the Sunday Citizen received barely one-tenth
of net advertising income of the Sunday Times. Both newspapers were
considered hostile to business and therefore denied advertising
patronage, while in the US the corrupting influences that Sinclair so
scathingly criticised have free rein, frequently suppressing news
carrying anti-business content by threatening to cancel corporate
advertising accounts.
Self-censorship
But besides advertising other, less obvious, factors have also worked
to make newspapers a willing mouthpiece for corporations and for
government. Newspapers demand a constant flow of low-cost material from
reliable sources that avoids expensive research. With budgets squeezed,
newspapers must focus where ‘meaningful’ news is most likely to occur.
Government, corporations, trade groups and business lobbies with press
and PR offices feed the press with stories that are presumed accurate,
with mutual benefit derived by delivering cost reductions to the
newspaper while tending to mute criticism by limiting the access of
alternative views. Similarly, purchasing news from enormously powerful
agencies like Associated Press or Reuters has cut costly international
newsgathering. Of course, not all news can be printed, but when
reputedly less than 2 percent of the world’s news gathered by these
agencies is actually passed on to the news media, it raises serious
questions about the criteria used to filter news deemed fit for our
consumption. News that seriously threatens the status quo is given
scant exposure or will simply be omitted – as if it never existed.
Clearly, not all capitalism’s misdemeanours can be simply ignored
because the consequences cannot always be hidden. The press must be
seen as criticising the behaviour of a company or government, for no
other reason than to maintain credibility, though such incidents are
generally quickly forgotten as the press moves on to the next story.
But although censorship by omission certainly occurs it would be wrong
to assume that journalism, in Britain at least, is consciously censored
or that a conspiracy amongst journalists exists to hide facts from
public scrutiny. Instead self-censorship linked to the personal
economic necessity to conform to institutional and company requirements
make journalists, in Sinclair’s words, drift “inevitably towards the
point of view held by their masters”. This is precisely what George
Orwell meant when he wrote in his unpublished introduction to Animal
Farm, that “unpopular ideas can be silenced, and inconvenient facts
kept dark, without any need for an official ban” (Times Literary
Supplement, September 1972.)
In capitalist
society the production of a successful newspaper means
journalistic integrity and editorial objectiveness are subordinate to
the institutional requirement of production for profit. There can be no
other way, for as Professor Edward Ross pointed out in Sinclair’s era:
“To urge the editor, under the thumb of the advertiser or of the owner,
to be more independent, is to invite him to remove himself from his
profession. As to the capitalist owner, to exhort him to run his
newspaper in the interests of truth and progress is about as reasonable
as to exhort the mill-owner to work his property for the public good
instead of for his private benefit.” (Edward Alsworth Ross, ‘The
Suppression of Important News’, Atlantic Magazine, March 1910, quoted
in Monthly Review May 2002).
More recent testimony to this enduring law of capitalist newspaper
production was expressed by Piers Morgan, former editor of the Daily
Mirror, when he stated, “I only judge a story on what sells and what
doesn’t” (Guardian, 30 November 1996).
Unreformable
Today, newspapers perform in much the same way as they did in
Sinclair’s time, precisely because they operate in the same economic
conditions. They lock-in our views to prevailing ideology by playing on
prejudices and aspirations, incessantly communicating messages that
instil working people with beliefs needed to integrate them into a life
of wage slavery, with advertising assisting to create a ‘virtual’ world
conducive to buying. “Journalism,” Sinclair wrote, “is one of the
devices whereby industrial autocracy keeps its control over political
democracy; it is the day to day, between elections propaganda, whereby
the minds of the people are kept in a state of acquiescence, so that
when the crisis of an election comes, they can go to the polls and
caste their ballots for either one of the two parties of the
exploiters”.
Sinclair’s book is a penetrating analysis of the early US capitalist
press. But it is also the work of an author who, despite his stinging
criticisms of the capitalist newspaper industry, believed that the
press could in someway reform itself to stand outside class struggle
and be recreated as a neutral independent force within capitalist
society. Sinclair held the views that capitalism and genuine democracy
could co-exist and journalism could be freed from the economic laws of
capitalism to give expression to popular demand and abstract ideas of
‘social justice’ and ‘fairness’ that were divorced from the actual
material conditions. But the reality is that as long as newspaper
production is a profit-driven business it can never be free from the
corrosive economic influence of capitalism. We need not lament this
fact – for the press can perform in no any other way in capitalist
society. But nor should we waste our energies on bankrupt delusions of
press (or any other) reform, as Sinclair did, that at best can offer
only temporary respite. Instead, we should organise to replace a
society that corrupts and debases everything it touches and build
socialism where a free and equal people will enjoy a free and
informative press.
STEVE TROTT
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