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Wednesday, 26 September 2018
ABC chairman told Michelle Guthrie to sack Emma Alberici to appease Coalition
Justin Milne emailed Guthrie in May saying: ‘We need to save the ABC, not Emma’
Guardian staff
ABC chairman Justin Milne asked then managing director Michelle Guthrie to sack Emma Alberici in May.
Photograph: ABC
There are calls for the chairman of the ABC to resign following
revelations he told Michelle Guthrie to fire economics editor Emma
Alberici after the former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull complained
about her reporting of tax policy.
The instruction to fire Alberici came in an email from Justin Milne to then managing director Guthrie in May, Fairfax Media first reported on Wednesday.
Guardian Australia has confirmed the message.
“They [the government] hate her,” Milne wrote. “We are tarred with
her brush. I think it’s simple. Get rid of her. We need to save the ABC –
not Emma. There is no guarantee they [the Coalition] will lose the next
election.”
The comments were circulated to members of the ABC board a week before Guthrie was sacked as managing director on Monday.
In May, Fairfax reported, Turnbull sent a list of concerns to the ABC
news director, Gaven Morris, about Alberici’s coverage of the
government.
Reports of Milne’s intervention has brought a rapid response.
Staff
have called for protest meetings to take place at lunchtime at ABC
headquarters in Sydney. There will be speakers, placards saying ‘Hands
off ABC’ and calls for Milne to resign pending an investigation.
Labor’s communications spokeswoman Michelle Rowland called Milne for
an explanation on Wednesday and described the situation as
“extraordinary”.
“The independence and integrity of the ABC is paramount,” she said in
a statement. “It must remain free from political interference and
withstand criticism even if, and particularly if, that criticism comes
from the prime minister of the day.”
She called on the minister for communications, Mitch Fifield, to
“ascertain what has happened as a matter of urgency and confirm whether
or not pressure was put on the former managing director to sack an ABC
journalist.”
“Mitch Fifield must explain what he knows about this and why he thinks this is appropriate,” she said.
ABC staff walkout over political interference allegations – video
Milne defended his actions on Wednesday, which he described as in line with the pursuit of his duties.
“The job of the ABC Board is to independently govern the
Corporation, protect its best interests, ensure that it is well funded,
well managed and that our content is of the highest standards. That is
precisely what the Board has done and will continue to do,” he said.
“I do not propose to provide a running commentary on day to day issues which arise in pursuit of our duties.”
Fifield distanced himself from the situation, saying that while he
had raised “factual errors” with the ABC in the past he “respected the
legislated operational and editorial independence of the broadcaster.
“I have never involved myself in staffing matters, nor am I aware of any member of the government who has sought to do so.
“Questions about the ABC’s board and management are matters for the ABC.”
The secretary of the ABC section of the Community and Public Sector
Union, Sinddy Ealy, said Milne had to resign over the Alberici
intervention.
“It’s untenable for him to remain as the chairman of the ABC Board in
light of his editorial interference on behalf of the Coalition
Government,” she said.
That call was echoed by the journalists’ union, the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance.
The reports “would indicate Mr Milne has no understanding of
editorial independence, proper complaints handling processes, or the
appropriate distance a board chair needs to keep from staffing matters,”
the union said in a statement.
Greens media spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young also said Milne’s
position was untenable. “As the chair of an organisation that is
supposed to be independent of government, Milne has shown he can’t be
trusted with the ABC,” she said.
“Protecting the ABC from political interference is the most important responsibility of the chair.
“There can be no more serious breach than the apparent demand that a
journalist be sacked at the behest of the prime minister of the day.”
“The board’s responsibility is to uphold the ABC Charter and ensure
that the broadcaster is independent at all times and that its
journalists and staff can do their jobs without fear or favour. Mr Milne
must go.”
Alberici told ABC radio the reports of Milne’s email were “disappointing if it’s true” on Wednesday morning.
“… it does strike [me] as odd and very disturbing, if the other
reports are true, that the minister was also somehow expressing a view
about my continued employment,” she said.
“I just think it really undermines the independence of the ABC and that’s certainly why I work there.”
In response to questions about Milne’s email to sack Alberici a
spokesman for the ABC board said: “The board was united in its
disappointment at the need to correct content in the article. The board
takes seriously its responsibility, as legislated in the ABC Act, to
ensure that editorial output is accurate.”
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