Aitchison and Television New Zealand Ltd - 1997-003
Members
- J M Potter (Chair)
- A Martin
- L M Loates
- R McLeod
Dated
Complainant
- David Aitchison
Number
1997-003
Programme
MiddayBroadcaster
Television New Zealand LtdChannel/Station
TVNZ 1
Summary
Firearms control was discussed during an interview with the wife of one of the Port
Arthur victims on the news programme Midday on TV One on 18 October 1996.
Mr Aitchison of Wellington complained to Television New Zealand Ltd that the
interview failed to present both sides of the firearms debate in a fair and equitable
manner because no attempt was made to balance what he described as the less than
objective and emotive views of the interviewee. Furthermore, he complained, the
interviewer strongly sympathised with the interviewee's point of view.
Acknowledging that the issue was a controversial one, TVNZ emphasised that both
sides of the debate had been reflected in its news and current affairs programming over
a period of time. With respect to the interview complained about, it denied that it was
designed to promote the views of the anti-gun lobby. Dissatisfied with that response,
Mr Aitchison referred the complaint to the Broadcasting Standards Authority under
s.8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989.
For the reasons given below, the Authority declines to uphold the complaint.
Decision
The members of the Authority have viewed the item complained about and have read the
correspondence (summarised in the Appendix). As is its practice, the Authority
determines the complaint without a formal hearing.
A call for tighter controls on guns was made by the widow of one of the Port Arthur
victims when she was interviewed on Midday on TV One on 18 October 1996. Along
with the partner of the policeman killed recently in Hawkes Bay, she was launching a
campaign to tighten gun ownership regulations. Referring to a current review on gun
laws, she urged viewers to make submissions to the review body.
Mr Aitchison complained that because the issue of firearms control was highly topical,
and its issues emotive and controversial, TVNZ was obliged to present both sides of the
debate in a fair and equitable manner. He considered the interviewee's views were less
than objective and somewhat emotive, and under those circumstances he believed that
TVNZ had a responsibility to ensure that the opposing viewpoint was fairly and
adequately presented. In addition, he was critical of the manner in which the interview
was conducted, suggesting that it was "little more than thinly veiled propaganda for the
anti-firearms lobby."
TVNZ advised Mr Aitchison that it assessed the complaint under standard G6 of the
Television Code of Broadcasting Practice. That standard requires broadcasters:
G6 To show balance, impartiality and fairness in dealing with political
matters, current affairs and all questions of a controversial nature.
It emphasised that the item was based on a current news event: the decision of two
women, whose husband and partner had both been murdered by gunmen, to urge
people to make submissions for tighter gun control laws. The woman interviewed
appealed to everyone who had an opinion about gun regulations to make their views
known, so that representative submissions could be received.
TVNZ referred to s.4(1)(d) of the Broadcasting Act 1989, which recognises that on a
topical issue such as gun control, balance could be achieved over time. It pointed to the
18 stories it had broadcast in the previous six months dealing with aspects of gun
control, in which both sides of the debate were reflected. It strongly denied that the
Midday interview amounted to propaganda for the firearms lobby, describing it as a
legitimate interview which described how the two women were going to work together
to urge New Zealanders to consider further restraints on gun ownership. It did not
believe it demonstrated a lack of balance by allowing the widow of one of the Port
Arthur victims to explain her views to a lunchtime audience.
When he referred the complaint to the Authority, Mr Aitchison suggested that if TVNZ
believed it could disregard its responsibilities because it had run a balanced story in the
past, there seemed to be little point in laying a complaint. He suggested that many
people were occasional viewers like himself and thus were not in a position to
appreciate the broad notion of balance being achieved over time. He insisted that a
programme was either balanced or it was not.
As far as the Authority is concerned, the interview was a legitimate discussion of the
views of one woman and her campaign to restrict access to guns by tightening gun
control laws. In the interview, she urged ordinary New Zealanders to express their
views about gun control as a counter to what she described as the organised voice of the
powerful gun lobby. She expressed her belief that most people wanted tighter gun
controls, and emphasised that it was in incidents of domestic violence that guns were
the most threatening and dangerous.
The Authority concludes it was clear that the interview presented the opinion of the
woman and does not consider it was necessary, in that context, to refer to the other side
of the gun control debate. It also refers to the Act's allowance that when controversial
matters of public importance are discussed, balance may be achieved over time. It
accepts TVNZ's submission that stories broadcast over the past six months have given
exposure to both sides of the gun control debate. Accordingly, it does not consider the
standard was breached on this occasion.
For the reasons set forth above, the Authority declines to uphold the complaint.
Signed for and on behalf of the Authority
Judith Potter
Chairperson
23 January 1997
Appendix
David Aitchison's Complaint to Television New Zealand Ltd -
25 October 1996
Mr Aitchison of Wellington complained to Television New Zealand Ltd that an item on
Midday broadcast on TV One on 18 October 1996 breached broadcasting standards.
The interview with the widow of one of the victims of the Port Arthur massacre in
Tasmania focused on her campaign to lobby for greater gun controls.
Mr Aitchison complained first that the item lacked balance. He noted that the firearms
control debate was highly topical and the issues at its centre were often emotive and
controversial. Therefore, he believed, TVNZ had a duty to present both sides of the
debate in a fair and equitable manner. Mr Aitchison suggested that the views of the
widow were somewhat less than objective, and somewhat emotive and therefore TVNZ
had a responsibility to ensure the opposing viewpoint was fairly and adequately
presented.
Mr Aitchison's second concern was that the interviewer appeared to sympathise
strongly with the interviewee's point of view. He wrote:
I certainly don't recall Mrs Winter being asked to justify any of her comments or
to answer any searching questions on firearms control issues. In fact, if anyone
is looking for a visual definition of the term "soft interview" then this must
surely be it. If I am wrong and Mrs Woods isn't a gun control advocate, I can
only conclude that she failed to do her homework before the interview. Either
way, the public interest hasn't been well served. In my view the interview was
little more than thinly veiled propaganda for the anti-firearms lobby.
TVNZ's Response to the Formal Complaint - 19 November 1996
TVNZ noted first that the interview was a studio interview with Mrs Jo Winter, the
widow of a Port Arthur victim, who had joined with the widow of a policeman slain in
Hawkes Bay to lobby for tightening gun ownership laws in New Zealand. It followed
an item about a woman who held police officers at bay in a superette.
The item, it continued, was based on a current news event as well: the decision of two
women to lobby for gun controls. With respect to the attitude of the presenter, TVNZ's
view was that she did not demonstrate sympathy for Mrs Winter's views, but did -
quite properly - show sympathy for Mrs Winter herself.
On the question of balance, TVNZ suggested that the interview was a particularly
sensitive one and not an occasion on which Mrs Winter's views should be directly
challenged. It did not agree that her position came across as an emotive stance or one
lacking objectivity. It pointed out that Mrs Winter appealed to everyone with an opinion
to make themselves heard so that submissions could be representative.
TVNZ observed that standard G6 was derived from s.4(1)(d) of the Broadcasting Act
1989 which recognises that balance on a current issue can be achieved over a period of
time. It argued that both sides of the issue had been regularly heard in New Zealand
since the killings at Aramoana and that in the past six months alone TVNZ had
broadcast eighteen stories which dealt with aspects of gun control. During that time, it
continued, both sides of the debate had been heard and the views of the gun lobby on
both sides of the Tasman had been reflected in its news and current affairs
programming.
Recognising that generally when a person made a public stand on an issue they could
expect to be challenged by those opposed to that viewpoint, TVNZ suggested that this
was an occasion when such a challenge would have been inappropriate.
It strongly denied that the interview was designed as propaganda for the anti-firearms
lobby. TVNZ concluded that the gun control debate was one which had been widely
reported on television with all points of view being heard from. It did not believe it
demonstrated a lack of balance by allowing Mrs Winter to explain her views to a
lunchtime audience.
Mr Aitchison's Referral to the Broadcasting Standards Authority - 25
November 1996
Dissatisfied with TVNZ's decision not to uphold the complaint, Mr Aitchison referred it
to the Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989.
Pointing to his earlier letter, Mr Aitchison stated that his concerns were clearly set out
there and there was no necessity to repeat them. He then proceeded to comment on
TVNZ's response.
Mr Aitchison commented first that he did not understand the relationship between a
news story about a woman holding a knife to the throat of the owner of a superette and
an item about firearms control.
Regarding his concern that the presenter appeared openly sympathetic to the views of
Mrs Winter, and TVNZ's response that Mrs Winter deserved sympathy, Mr Aitchison
responded that he was at a loss to understand what that had to do with balanced
reporting. He wrote:
Mrs Winter's grief and sense of loss are not in contention, and I would have
been disturbed had she been interviewed in the "hostile manner" mentioned by
[TVNZ]. This is not what I suggested should happen at all. My concerns relate
solely to what I regard as the one sided reporting of her advocacy of firearms
control as a mechanism to prevent mass killings!
To TVNZ's suggestion that "decency" prevented TVNZ from challenging Mrs Winter's
viewpoint, Mr Aitchison noted that Mrs Winter was not new to television interviews
and on a previous occasion had been willing to debate the issues with supporters of the
Arms Act 1983. He added:
I can only conclude that TVNZ's rule about breaching the bounds of decency,
where widows are concerned, has been adopted very recently.
With respect to TVNZ's defence that balance was achieved over time, Mr Aitchison
considered that argument made a nonsense of almost any complaint about balanced
reporting. He argued for people like himself who were occasional viewers of
television, he would never be in a position to appreciate the broader notion of balanced
reporting in action. To his mind, a programme was either balanced or it was not. He
maintained that the programme on 18 October was not.
TVNZ's Response to the Authority - 4 December 1996
TVNZ responded to some issues raised by Mr Aitchison. First it explained the
relevance of the superette incident, during which the woman was shot and wounded by
a police officer. TVNZ noted that it was another example of guns on the street, albeit in
the hands of the police, adding that whether the police should be armed was part of the
gun debate.
It maintained that the interview stood up to scrutiny as a fair and balanced report of the
decision by the two widows to work together on the gun control issue. It repeated that
Mrs Winter had urged everyone with an opinion to make themselves heard on the issue
of gun control.
TVNZ did not consider that a debate on gun ownership was appropriate on this
occasion. It noted there had been a full debate on Holmes about six weeks previously
and emphasised that TVNZ had broadcast 18 items dealing with aspects of gun control
in the past six months alone and that those had canvassed a wide range of opinions.
To Mr Aitchison's view that all items should contain balance, TVNZ responded that
public awareness of an issue was a given in this instance, and the interview with Mrs
Winter provided another dimension to an ongoing story which was of public interest as
well as in the public interest.
It repeated its view that Mrs Winter deserved to be treated with sympathy when
interviewed and did not accept that treating an interview subject with sympathy caused a
lack of balance.
Mr Aitchison's Final Comment - 12 December 1996
Mr Aitchison raised two issues, both of which were concerned with balance. The first
was a response to TVNZ's point that Mrs Winter's personal circumstances dictated that
she be treated with sympathy when interviewed. While accepting that most people
would agree with that, Mr Aitchison argued that it was only natural that people
sympathising with her, but who had no understanding of firearms issues, would agree
with the analysis of the circumstances which culminated in her tragedy. In Mr
Aitchison's view, her analysis of the tragedy was not necessarily correct.
The other aspect of TVNZ's reply which he addressed was its argument that Mrs
Winter asked "everyone with an opinion" to make submissions to the inquiry head. Mr
Aitchison disagreed that this balanced the interview, arguing that it was a somewhat less
than genuine attempt to encourage an open debate. He concluded:
As Mrs Winter openly acknowledges during the course of the interview, what
she was actually trying to do, with TVNZ's help, was to encourage those
people who sympathise with her and her viewpoint to make submissions to the
Thorp Inquiry.