
 |
Bulletins Story:
FREEDOM OF POLITICAL SPEECH: PROLIFE ALLIANCE v
BBC
|
Date: 20.03.2002
|

In a judgment handed down last week by the Court of Appeal in an
application for Judicial Review by a political party called the
ProLife Alliance, the Court held that the freedom of political
speech must only be interfered with in very exceptional
circumstances. The refusal by the BBC (and other
broadcasters) to transmit an election broadcast by the ProLife
Alliance was unlawful.
In the run up to the last general election representatives from
the BBC and other terrestrial broadcasters rejected a video of the
proposed ProLife broadcast on the ground that it breached the BBC
Producer’s Guidelines and the ITC Programme Code. Milder
second and third versions of the ProLife broadcast were also
rejected for the same reasons. A fourth version was
ultimately approved and transmitted, but that version contained no
visual images.
Lord Justice Laws said that the case was about the censorship of
political speech and it concerned the constraints which might
lawfully be imposed by a broadcaster on the content of the party
election broadcast. He had watched all three videos and
described the first, which showed the grisly aftermath of a
successful abortion. The pictures were taken from real
footage and the judge described them as “disturbing to any person
of ordinary sensibilities”.
The broadcasters’ case was that they were obliged by the
Broadcasting Act 1990 to ensure that nothing was included in their
programmes which offended against good taste or decency or was
likely to be offensive to public feeling. Lord Justice Laws
said that the Court had to decide whether such considerations
constituted a legal justification for what amounted to an act of
censorship of the ProLife’s broadcast.
The courts owe a special responsibility to the public as the
constitutional guardian of the freedom of political debate, said
Lord Justice Laws. Freedom of expression was a constitutional
right and its enjoyment by an accredited political party called for
heightened protection. While the broadcasters’ views were
entitled to be respected, their weight was at best modest and the
courts’ constitutional responsibility to protect political speech
was “overarching”. He observed of the broadcasters that
perhaps the feathers of their liberal credentials were ruffled at
the overtone of the word ‘censorship’. He accepted that some
forms of censorship were justified, but while what was shown in the
broadcast was graphic and disturbing, if political free speech was
to be taken seriously, those characteristics could not justify this
instance of censorship.
The judge concluded that there was no answer to the claim that
the ProLife Alliance was entitled to show, not just tell, what
happened when abortions took place, since their purpose was to
oppose it. While there might be instances, even around a
general election, where censorship of political speech might be
justified on the grounds of taste or offensiveness, this would only
be in a very extreme case, which would be likely to involve factors
such as gratuitous sensationalism and dishonesty.
The Court of Appeal has reinforced the right of individuals and
political groups to put forward views which may be disturbing or
offensive to the majority on the basis that it is vital in a
democracy that this right is preserved. It is perhaps ironic
that all four terrestrial broadcasters found themselves being
reminded of this by a Lord Justice of Appeal.
Jonathan Coad 20 March
2002
117
SEE ALSO OPINION PIECE IN THIS WEEK’S SOLICITORS JOURNAL
e-bulletins are for general guidance only. Legal advice should be sought before taking action in relation to specific matters. Where reference is made to Court decisions facts referred to are those reported as found by the Court. Please note that past bulletins included in the Archive have not been updated by any subsequent changes in statute or case law.
<< back to ebulletins
|