A few days ago I
took part in a Royal Economic Conference session on the implications
of the Brexit vote. There is no need for me to describe how it went,
as there is a good write
up in the FT. By good, I mean that it was a fair reflection of what
went on. Philip Aldrick, economics editor at the Times, took
exception to something I said at the meeting on twitter.
Almost a month ago I
wrote
a post on propaganda. I used a definition borrowed
from Jason Stanley, where intent was key. A good journalists provides
what they believe are they key facts that the reader needs, while
propaganda involves providing facts that advance the newspaper’s
view. The interesting thing about this twitter conversation was that
Aldrick thought that selecting facts to support the papers view was
not propaganda, and that he thought it was what the other newspapers
he named and I as an academic did.
Just to crystalise
what I mean, take this article
that recently appeared in the Telegraph. The headline (and remember
this is all that many Telegraph readers will read) said “EU
migrants without a job make up city the size of Bristol”. The
article continued:
“EU migrants of working age living in the UK who do not have a job account for a city the size of Bristol, new figures have revealed. One in seven of the 2,733,000 EU migrants aged 16-64 - a total of 390,000 - are unemployed or “inactive”.
A survey by the Office for National Statistics does not give a breakdown of how many claim benefits, but those who are unemployed will be eligible for jobseeker’s allowance and may also claim housing benefit and child benefit. People who are “inactive” include those claiming disability benefits.”
The ONS survey
can be found here. The fact that the Telegraph chose not to report
was that 1 in 5 UK nationals was unemployed or inactive (excluding students). The
reason that this is such a high figure is that ‘inactive’
includes mothers staying home to look after children,
another fact that the Telegraph decided not to report.
The real story therefore is that migrants of working age are more
likely to be working than UK nationals of working age. Other things
being equal, this means that they will be paying more taxes and
therefore contributing proportionately more to public services that UK nationals. By
selecting which facts to report to their readers, the Telegraph
turned this into a story about how many migrants were not working,
and the amount of benefits they were collecting. In doing this, they
were following in the proud traditions of the Mail, Sun and Express.
Would you call this journalism or propaganda? There are a great many good journalists who would not want this described as the same as what they do, and it fits the definition of propaganda I gave exactly. Propaganda distorts the truth, and in a country like the UK good propaganda does not need to resort to lying about facts to achieve its goal. And of course it matters a lot. I suspect that stories like this are one of the reasons the state can treat migrants so badly
in this country.