10.1.15

 

Are the Greens or UKIP a major party? Have your say.

Ofcom has issued a draft ruling that the Greens are not a 'major party' but that UKIP is. Hard to justify, one might think, given that Carolyn Lucas has been a sitting MP since September 2008, while UKIP did not acquire its first MP until a by-election in October 2014. One consequence of Ofcom's decision is that the Greens may be shut out of any televised national election debates, while Farage is given a seat.

It's a draft ruling, and there is still time to have your say.
My own response to Ofcom is below.

Question 1: Please provide your views on:
a) the evidence of current support laid out in Annex 2, and
b) whether there is any other relevant evidence which you consider Ofcom should take into
account for the purposes of the 2015 review of the list of major parties:

The Green Party has had a sitting MP since September 2008, while UKIP has only had a sitting MP since October 2014. This relevant point appears nowhere in the annex.

Question 2: Do you agree with our assessment in relation to each of:
a) The existing major parties,
b) Traditional Unionist Voice in Northern Ireland,
c) The Green Party (including the Scottish Green Party), and
d) UKIP?
Please provide reasons for your views:

It is a scandal to include UKIP as a major party while excluding the Greens. Either both should be included, or both excluded. I would prefer to see both included.

While UKIP enjoys stronger support than the Greens in current opinion polls, this is a shortlived phenomenon in part driven by the increased coverage recently given to UKIP by news media. Ofcom's role should be to dampen the effect of media focus on the current bandwagon, not to amplify it.

Ofcom should ensure that all serious contenders have an opportunity to make their views heard. The cutoff for being a 'serious contender' should sit at support from around 5% of the electorate.

Question 3: Do you agree with the proposed amendment to Rule 9 of the PPRB Rules Procedures outlined in paragraph 3.7 above? Please provide reasons for your views:

I do not agree with the proposed amendment. It is stated the parties 'might'' raise unsustainable complaints, but no evidence is provided that this is a serious problem. It is more democratic to leave the decision to the Election Commission than to give Ofcom the ability to refuse complaints without any right of appeal.

[I note also that the reference on the web form to 'paragraph 3.7 above' is confusing. Not only does the relevant paragraph not appear on the web page with the question, the web page does not even contain a link to the document containing the paragraph.] 

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Comments:
Interesting to read your responses to the consultation, here are mine:

Question 1: Please provide your views on:
a) the evidence of current support laid out in Annex 2, and
b) whether there is any other relevant evidence which you consider Ofcom should take into account for the purposes of the 2015 review of the list of major parties

Answer 1;
a) My view is that the evidence is irrelevant because giving each major party substantial coverage on television only serves to help perpetuate their position as a major party. The system is flawed and unfair because the policies of other smaller parties go unheard by a large section of society, while the parties Ofcom have deemed 'major' continue to have their message heard year after year. It is nothing more than propaganda and censorship.

It is my view that all parties should have equal share of television coverage, even if that means no parties have any coverage.

b) By relying on statistics from past years, Ofcom holds the democratic process back. Ofcom should consider YouGov polls such as this: https://yougov.co.uk/news/2015/01/13/greens-tied-conservatives-among-young-people/

Ofcom should look at what's happening right now, not what happened last year. The statistics of yesteryear are all but irrelevant in gauging the political climate today.



Question 2: Do you agree with our assessment in relation to each of:
a) The existing major parties,
b) Traditional Unionist Voice in Northern Ireland,
c) The Green Party (including the Scottish Green Party), and
d) UKIP?
Please provide reasons for your views.

Answer 2:

a) Strongly disagree. The system of choosing 'major parties' is flawed and undemocratic.
b) No opinion.
c) and d) Strongly disagree. All parties, including the Greens, should have an equal platform on television, even if this means no parties receive any coverage.



Question 3: Do you agree with the proposed amendment to Rule 9 of the PPRB Rules Procedures outlined in paragraph 3.7 above? Please provide reasons for your views.

Answer 3:

Strongly disagree. It gives Ofcom the power to ignore a dispute. This should be the decision of the Election Committee, not Ofcom.

 
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