The EU adopts a ‘Media Freedom’ law, where ‘freedom’ doesn’t mean what you think it does
By: Rachel Marsden
The act, like most of the bloc’s virtue signaling, is the opposite of what its name ought to herald
The EU’s new Media Freedom Act has now been voted into law, with 464 votes
for, 92 against, and 65 abstentions.
There are some news outlets whose coverage of the vote I’d like to see. Like
RT’s, where you’re reading this right now. But anyone who’s viewing this from
inside the European Union’s bastion of democracy and freedom is likely doing so
via a VPN connection routed through somewhere outside the bloc, to circumvent
its press censorship.
Nothing in this new law suggests that this will change, or that there will be
increased access to information and analysis for the average person. Such
improved freedoms might lead to people making up their own minds rather than
having various flavors of a similar narrative served up for mass consumption. As
has become par for the course in so-called Western democracies, inconvenient
facts and analysis will still be dismissed as “disinformation” and criticism of
the establishment still qualified as an effort to sow division – as though
dissent itself wasn’t supposed to be proof of a healthy and vibrant democracy.
So, now that we’ve gotten out of the way any hope of lifting the EU’s top-down
censorship in the absence of due process, exactly what kind of lip service does
this new law pay to the lofty notion of media freedom?
No spying on journalists or pressing them to disclose their sources. Well,
unless you’re one of the countries that lobbied to be able to keep doing this –
like France, Italy, Malta, Greece, Cyprus, Sweden, and Finland – so basically, a
quarter of EU countries. Oh, but they have to invoke national-security concerns
in order to do so. Which, as we know, they’re very discerning about. Like, they
didn’t at all implement a virtual police state and extend its powers under the
guise of fighting a virus with which French President Emmanuel Macron kept
saying they were “at war.” Nor did Amnesty International point out the sweeping
“Orwellian” trend across Europe, at least as far back as 2017, of exploiting
domestic terrorist attacks to permanently embed what were supposed to be
extraordinary powers into criminal law, via measures like “overly broad
definitions of terrorism.” So, no doubt they’ll be equally reasonable when
slapping the “national security threat” label on a journalist whose work they
want to peek at.
At least now, under this new law, they do have to fully inform any targeted
journalist of the steps being taken against them.
Another thing that changes is that there’s to be a centralized database into
which “all news and current affairs outlets regardless of their size will have
to publish information about their owners,” according to an EU press release.
May we propose a first candidate for that? The NGO Reporters Without Borders has
praised this new law as a “major step forward for the right to information
within the European Union.” The same NGO also just launched a “Svoboda” (Russian
for “freedom”) satellite package eventually consisting “of up to 25 independent
Russian language radio and television channels” aimed at Russia, Ukraine, and
the Baltics. The launch took place at the EU parliament, in the presence of EU
“values and transparency” commissioner (yes, that’s a real title), Vera Jourova,
who has said in support of the new media law that “it is a threat to those who
want to use the power of the state, also the financial one, to make the media
dependent on them.” But she has also said about this new Russia-targeting
initiative that the EU state needs to “use all possible means to ensure that
their work, that facts and information can reach Russian-speaking people.” This
is the same person who advocated in favor of banning Russia-linked media outlets
in the EU.
Anyway, you first, guys. Show everyone else how it’s done. Also, does this
mean that all financial interests in the form of advertising spending will also
have to be declared by corporate media? Because state-backed media platforms are
already transparent; it’s the much more discretionary interests underpinning the
more commercial platforms that tend to be much less obvious to audiences.
Audiences may not know or understand, for example, why a particular corporate
media outlet might focus on a particular nation state with softball interviews,
travel pieces, and fluffy documentaries, and treating it with kid gloves in news
coverage, when in reality the same country is pumping a ton of ad revenues into
the place.
In any case, Queen Ursula von der Leyen’s battalion of bureaucratic desk jockeys
is set to grow in ranks now with a new “European Board for Media Services”
coming online as a result of the new law. Because freedom isn’t going to police
itself, pal.
The name itself Media Freedom Act really is the first clue that it’s probably
not all that much about freedom. Kind of like how the “European Peace Facility”
fund is used to buy weapons, or the “election” of the handpicked EU Commissioner
is really just what any normal country would call a confirmation vote.
It’s a pretty safe bet that whenever the EU kicks the virtue-signaling into
overdrive, using feel-good language to sell it, the reality is probably the
opposite of what’s advertised.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN