Sunday 24 November 2019

Fake News and Fake Law

I never thought I'd be part of voicing any serious concern of our wonderful BBC because it seems heretical and akin to losing faith in the NHS, motherhood and apple pie, but there's clearly something bad going on and touched upon recently by Peter Oborne and his recent Guardian article. 

The thing is this. It's pretty clear to most of us that our current prime minister is completely unfit for office having consistently proved his credentials as a self-serving and compulsive liar with dubious morals and a clear inability to be trusted in pretty much any situation whether it be political, personal or social. 

Now the BBC have clearly taken the surprising decision that, not withstanding all the impartiality rules that cover elections, the public will lose confidence in politics if they were to witness an unvarnished Boris Johnson demonstrating what an utter knob he is, so things have to be 'sanitised', edited, polished or just fixed Korean propaganda-style. First we had the Remembrance Sunday film swap in order to hide the fact a dishevelled and hung-over prime minister had a wreath upside down and got his timing wrong; now we have Question Time audience laughter replaced with rapturous applause when Boris's name is linked to issues of trust. This from the Canary website:- 
Boris Johnson’s appearance on the BBC Question Time (BBCQT) Leaders Debate didn’t exactly go well. From having to sneak into the studio while Jeremy Corbyn was greeted by crowds of supporters to refusing to apologise for his previous racist and homophobic comments, the PM was on the back foot.
But it was on the issue of trust that the audience really showed how much they despise Johnson. And their reaction explicitly showed the contempt they have for him on this issue. This was, seemingly, too much for BBC News. Because it apparently edited the clip, removing the full audience response and editing it to only show applause for Johnson.
We also discover that a vociferous questioner of Jeremy Corbyn over treatment of female Labour MP's is a Tory activist from Hull who has appeared three times previously and successfully made contributions from the audience. This from the Daily Politik on Facebook:- 
Oh look! Wadda ya know? ‘White shirt guy’ who attacked Corbyn in last night’s BBC Leaders debate, is a conservative activist! Ryan Jacobsz. Earlier this year, he was also the conservatives candidate for the local council of Hessle in East Riding, Yorkshire.
Last night was Ryan’s FOURTH appearance on BBCQT. In his first, he attacked Emily Thornberry in chesterfield on 20.04.2018 over Intervention in Syria. In the second, he attacked Richard Burgon on Labour’s brexit position 31.01.2019.
Can BBCQT Audience Producer and UKIP enthusiast, Alison Fuller Pedley explain how conservative activists and candidates make it onto the BBC QuestionTime audience so frequently and why they’re also always conveniently given the opportunity to ask their staged anti-Labour Tory PR attack questions?
--oo00oo-- 

Having got that off my chest, this in the Independent was going to be today's subject, how at election time lying and making stuff up is just second nature to the Tory Party:-

Conservatives accused of ‘peddling fake law’ with pledge to jail child killers for life

A Conservative election pledge – to jail child killers for life – has been dismissed as “fake law” amid calls for all parties to tackle a worsening crisis in the justice system. Days after the number of people punished for crimes in England and Wales hit a new record low, the Tories unveiled a commitment to jail adults who murder children for life, without parole.


Robert Buckland, the justice secretary and lord chancellor, said: “Under a Conservative majority government, the law will be rewritten to be absolutely clear: any murderer who denies a young, innocent child the right to life surrenders their own right to liberty. They do so permanently, and they do so without exception.”

Anonymous campaigner and blogger the Secret Barrister accused Mr Buckland of “peddling fake law”, adding: “A lord chancellor with respect for the rule of law and integrity of the justice system would be on the airwaves correcting this nonsense”. Responding to a Conservative Party tweet claiming it would “make sure life means life for child killers”, the anonymous junior barrister called the claim “a lie”.

“It won’t apply to all (or even most) ‘child killers’ – only adults who commit murder,” the Secret Barrister added. “The law already provides for whole life tariffs for adults who murder children. The number of cases this will apply to is virtually nil. It is a distraction. It is a lie.”

A more detailed summary of the Tories’ proposal said only adults aged 21 and over – who commit the “premeditated” murder of under-16s – would be subject to whole life orders.

The Conservatives said they would make the change by amending the Criminal Justice Act 2003, but then misinterpreted the law. A press release claimed it was currently “too restrictive” and only made whole life terms the starting point for judges in cases if a murder was of multiple children, or involved sexual or sadistic conduct. But the law only says that the offence must be of an “exceptionally high seriousness” to meet the threshold, and gives those factors in a non-exhaustive list of examples.

The Conservatives admitted that even if the law were changed, the “sentencing decision in any given case would continue to rest with the judge” and the “policy will be subject to the usual judicial discretion” – meaning the term could be lowered for mitigating circumstances.


Ellie Cumbo, the Law Society’s head of public law, said “premeditation” was not clearly defined in law and many child murders may not reach the bar. She told The Independent that judges already take pre-planning into account, and that only a “small number” of cases would be affected. “The whole life order already exists in law, and is imposed exactly where you would expect – in cases of this extremely rare and serious type,” Ms Cumbo added.

Other legal experts questioned how premeditation would be defined, and whether judges or juries would decide on the issue. Barrister and author Andrew Keogh said the proposals would “impact very few cases”. “Will a single offender actually serve a single day longer in prison as a result?” he said. “I await the impact assessment when or if the legislation is published, but I strongly suspect it will not. Sounds tough, but probably of no real effect at all.”

Experts also voiced doubt over a separate Conservative election pledge to get anyone illegally carrying a knife “charged within 24 hours and in court within a week – three times faster than the current average”. Boris Johnson said: “We are speeding up prosecutions to make sure the threat of being caught is always an effective deterrent.” But the Conservatives gave no indication of how the process would be “sped up”, amid staff shortages in the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) and a backlog of criminal cases waiting to be heard.


Half the magistrates’ courts in England and Wales have been closed as part of austerity measures since 2010, and the number of sitting days has also been reduced to cut costs. “There’s not only a question there about how the courts would accommodate that, but about how the CPS would make a charging decision in 24 hours,” Ms Cumbo said. She pointed out that the courts themselves are responsible for deciding when cases are heard, and are working with “very limited resources”.

“Listing is a mess because the courts are completely overburdened with cases, so it’s difficult to see how another fixed requirement will be accommodated when they’re already groaning under the weight of cases,” the lawyer said. “There’s a question about how you can accomplish a pledge like that without increasing resources to the CPS and courts.”

The Law Society is among organisations campaigning for the government to increase funding across the criminal justice system, as prosecutions plummet. Statistics released by the Ministry of Justice last week showed the number of people punished for crimes in England and Wales hit a new record low in the year to June, while recorded crime rose by 6 per cent. The rate of people jailed has fallen to 6.5 per cent, and the number given immediate prison sentences is at its lowest in a decade.

Separate statistics show that prosecutions are dropping for every type of crime, down to just 7.4 per cent of all recorded offences – a fall of 41,700 in a year. The number of criminal trials being held in England and Wales has plummeted to a record low, falling by 67,000 in the past 10 years. Legal organisations have largely blamed the change on severe cuts made by the Conservative Party to the Ministry of Justice and police budgets, causing fewer cases to be solved or brought to court.

While Mr Johnson has made a promise to hire 20,000 new police officers in three years a key pledge, the Public Accounts Committee said the system may not be able to cope with the consequences of a rise in demand.

7 comments:

  1. https://inews-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/inews.co.uk/opinion/columnists/general-election-2019-opinion-uk-politicians-media-outlets-destroying-trust-1320856?amp_js_v=a2&amp_gsa=1&amp&usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D#aoh=15745956115083&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Finews.co.uk%2Fopinion%2Fcolumnists%2Fgeneral-election-2019-opinion-uk-politicians-media-outlets-destroying-trust-1320856

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    1. If there really is a unit inside Russia’s FSB intelligence agency dedicated to sowing disinformation and confusion during this UK general election campaign then it really doesn’t have much to do.

      Because British political parties and media outlets are currently doing a more than effective job of reducing trust in our democratic processes to levels previously unimagined.

      The Conservatives have been brazen. They tried to hijack Labour’s manifesto launch by creating a ‘fake’ website, using the domain name labourmanifesto.co.uk and paying Google for it to be promoted to the top of search results. They doctored an online video to make it look like Labour Brexit spokesman Keir Starmer had been left stumped by a question from Piers Morgan, which he had answered promptly.

      The Tories enraged Twitter by changing the name of the party’s official account to “factcheckUK” and using it to attack comments made by Jeremy Corbyn in an ITV debate with Boris Johnson.

      Other parties are not blameless. Labour relentlessly repeats the misleading claim that the UK will pay £500m more per week for drugs following a post-Brexit deal with the US. Never mind the truth, it fits the party slogan that the NHS is being sold off by the Tories. The Liberal Democrats have used misleading bar charts to over-represent the party’s support.

      It is the media’s job to challenge this kind of skullduggery. Indeed, all these instances of political dark arts have been reported on.

      But even within journalism there are concerns that the news industry is failing in its duty. Peter Oborne, a veteran political writer and former Daily Mail columnist, has been vitriolic in his criticism of colleagues in the Westminster lobby. In a piece for Open Democracy, he said senior political editors had reduced themselves to uncritical “stenographers” for Johnson’s “media machine”.

      In The Guardian last week, he claimed that in 30 years of political reporting he had “never encountered a senior British politician who lies and fabricates so regularly, so shamelessly and so systematically as Boris Johnson”. But the media lets Johnson “get away” with it, Oborne said, claiming that BBC executives were fearful of undermining faith in the office of prime minister.

      That accusation was promptly rejected by BBC figureheads Huw Edwards and Andrew Marr.

      Oborne’s polemic is included by the professor of journalism Brian Cathcart in a dossier of criticisms which, he suggests, amounts to a “crisis in journalism”. Other exhibits include The Spectator’s Rod Liddle suggesting Muslims should be banned from voting, and the Telegraph having to publish corrections to three articles by Johnson this year before he gave up his job as a columnist to enter Downing Street.

      Cathcart is a long-standing campaigner for press reform. In defence of the lobby, the work of a political correspondent in 2019 isn’t easy.

      In a new low point in our polarised politics, the Tories last week barred the traditionally Labour-supporting Mirror from its campaign coach taking Johnson on a tour of constituencies in the north-east. The Tory leader is also refusing to take part in a leaders’ debate on Channel 4.

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    2. At the Labour manifesto launch, the BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg was booed by the party faithful. Corbyn, to his credit, shut the hecklers down. But he then cited media owners as his sworn enemy. “I welcome their hatred”, he said. Labour scalded the media by promising an inquiry into “Fake News”, months after a year-long probe into the subject by MPs.

      The Lib Dems are in conflict with broadcasters, suing ITV over being left out of its leaders’ debate. The party if elected, promises to stage a second part of the Leveson inquiry into press standards, seven years on. Can parties be trusted to convene such hearings when they often show such disregard for truth?

      “We have seen, particularly from the national campaigns, some remarkable new election tactics, new levels of misinformation which we are surprised to see,” says Will Moy, director of the charity Full Fact, which has been scrutinising political claims for ten years.

      Thankfully, Moy sees reasons for optimism as the election hots up. When Full Fact wrote to candidates, asking them to check their facts, back them with evidence and correct their mistakes, 50 prospective MPs wrote back enthusiastically. Moy identifies great public appetite for reliable information and says the news industry is doing more fact-checking than in previous elections. “There has been a collective commitment across a lot of the media to inform audiences and hold the election to the facts as best we know them.”

      Foreign actors may yet intrude. In another snub to media, Johnson has suppressed a report by Parliament’s Intelligence and Security committee into Russian interference in British democracy.

      But we have big enough threats to the truth closer to home.

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  2. By chance I just came across a Liberal Democrat Consultation document about rehabilitation of offenders - responses were wanted by early May 2019.

    I have merely scanned it - they seem oblivious to the wrecking they did to probation and specifically still want supervision of ALL released prisoners.

    They are absolutely hopeless - in fact worse - dangerous - they ignore all the experience that has been offered them since 2010 - yet still "consult" - why should those with frontline CJS professional experience waste time with these people?

    https://d3n8a8pro7vhmx.cloudfront.net/libdems/pages/42507/attachments/original/1553689678/Rehabilitation_Consultation_Paper.pdf

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  3. Sad to say the majority of those who will put Bozo into office are either not aware of or not interested in the fact that he's lying.

    Meanwhile the wealthy, comfortable, self-satisfied establishment media - especially the BBC - continue to peddle their "Corbyn is the problem" message with non-stop vox pops of 'ordinary voters' in a range of regional accents:

    "Seventy six generations of my family voted Labour. We moved into a discarded kettle in 2010, we bathe in raw sewage and drink whatever warm sputum we can catch as our amusingly casual racist MP drives by in their Bentley, guffawing and slavvering...
    ... But you mark my words I'll. never. vote. for. Corbyn.
    He's a Communist. A Terrorist Sympathiser. A Traitor. He doesn't want us to have Sky or Amazon or Facebook or mobile 'phones or fun. He wants to ruin our lives!"

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  4. From the Independent:-

    Boris Johnson has been accused of “deceit” over his plans for the NHS, after his promise of “50,000 more nurses” turned out to include 18,500 existing nurses who the government hopes to persuade to remain in the workforce.

    The recruitment pledge was a central plank of a Conservative election manifesto, which also promised to complete EU withdrawal by 31 January, invest £100bn in infrastructure and introduce a triple tax lock ruling out increases in the rates of income tax, VAT or national insurance until 2024.

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  5. Ian Dunt - https://www.politics.co.uk/blogs/2019/11/22/week-in-review-tory-disinformation-campaign-intensifies

    "In Hungary, Viktor Orban regularly treats the few remaining independent journalists as being in league with opposition parties. In the US, Donald Trump tried to eject critical journalists from White House press conferences.

    It's happening here too. The Conservatives [who have recently banned the Daily Mirror newspaper from getting on its election bus] are attempting to neuter independent sources of scrutiny and present themselves as the only objective outlet for information. Discredit and replace. Control the narrative.

    The cumulative effect is that we all sink further into this swamp of disinformation, in which you can't rely on what you see or read. That makes rational debate impossible. The space of commonly accepted facts falls away. And all that's left is tribal warfare and paranoia."

    *** Control The Narrative - the organisational management strategy employed by NOMS/HMPPS to ensure Probation was disenfranchised, disbanded, dismembered. The self same technique was used to neutralise probation unions, to alienate critics of TR, to facilitate enriching the vacuous parasites who are gorging themselves on taxpayer money.

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