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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> The Liberal Democrats & The Scottish National Party, R. (On the Application of) v ITV Broadcasting Ltd [2019] EWHC 3282 (Admin) (29 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/3282.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3282 (Admin), [2020] 4 WLR 4, [2019] WLR(D) 655 |
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CO/4471/2019 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE WARBY
____________________
The Queen (on the application of (1) The Liberal Democrats (2) The Scottish National Party) |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
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ITV Broadcasting Limited |
Defendant |
____________________
Philip Coppel QC and Sam Fowles (instructed by Balfour and Manson LLP)
for the Second Claimant
Kieron Beal QC (instructed by Hogan Lovells International LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 18 November 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Davis and Mr Justice Warby:
Introduction
The factual background
The decision under challenge
"ITV will stage a live head-to-head debate on Tuesday 19th November between Conservative leader Boris Johnson and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.
Julie Etchingham will moderate the debate.
Later that same evening ITV will broadcast a live interview based programme in which other party leaders will be able to comment on the head-to-head debate and set out their own electoral offer.
ITV plans to hold another debate later in the campaign at which the Liberal Democrats, the SNP, the Brexit Party, the Greens, Plaid Cymru as well as Labour and the Conservative Party will all have the opportunity to be represented by their leader or another senior figure.
There will additionally be separate live prime-time debates in Northern Ireland and Wales. STV plan to hold a debate in Scotland.
ITV's Tonight programme plans profiles and interviews with the leaders of the main political parties in Britain in the lead up to the 12 December vote. ITV's Peston programme will provide its own insight into the latest developments each week. And Good Morning Britain as well as other ITV Daytime shows will offer their focus on the campaign.
More details on all ITV's comprehensive General Election coverage, in national and regional programming, including live overnight coverage of the results will be set out in the coming days."
The Statutory and Regulatory Context
(a) The Broadcasting Act 1990
"(a) to comply with any direction given by [the regulator] as to such matters as one specified in the licence, or of a description so specified, or
(b) (except to the extent that [the regulator] consents to his doing or not doing them) not to do or to do such things as are specified in the licence or are of a description so specified".
(b) The Communications Act 2003
"(1) to secure that the holder of every Broadcasting Act licence at all times holds his licence on the conditions which are for the time being included in the regulatory regime for the licensed service;
(2) to do all that they can to secure that the holder of every such licence complies ... with the conditions so included in the regulatory regime for that service."
"(c) that news included in television services is presented with due impartiality and that the impartiality requirements of section 320 are complied with;
(g) that advertising that contravenes the prohibition on political advertising set out in section 321(2) is not included in television services".
Section 319(3) requires the standards to be contained in "one or more codes".
"(b) the preservation, in the case of every television programme service, of due impartiality, on the part of the person providing the service, as respects all of those matters;"
"(4) For the purposes of this section
(a) the requirement specified in subsection (1)(b) is one that (subject to any rules under subsection (5)) may be satisfied by being satisfied in relation to a series of programmes taken as a whole;
. . . .
(5) Ofcom's standards code shall contain provision setting out the rules to be observed in connection with the following matters
(a) the application of the requirement specified in subsection (1)(b);
(b) the determination of what, in relation to that requirement, constitutes a series of programmes for the purposes of subsection (4)(a);
. . .
(6) Any provision made for the purposes of subsection (5)(a) must, in particular, take account of the need to ensure the preservation of impartiality in relation to the following matters (taking each matter separately) -
(a) matters of major political or industrial controversy, and
(b) major matters relating to current public policy,
as well as of the need to ensure that the requirement specified in subsection (1)(b) is satisfied generally in relation to a series of programmes taken as a whole."
"(1) The regulatory regime for every programme service licensed by a Broadcasting Act licence includes conditions for securing
(a) that standards set under section 319 are observed in the provision of that service; and
(b) that procedures for the handling and resolution of complaints about the observance of those standards are established and maintained.
(2) It shall be the duty of Ofcom themselves to establish procedures for the handling and resolution of complaints about the observance of standards set under section 319.
. . ."
In the context of General Election coverage, Ofcom generally forms an Election Committee, which receives and makes determinations upon complaints of non- compliance with the Code.
(c) The Ofcom Broadcasting Code
"'Due' is an important qualification to the concept of impartiality. Impartiality itself means not favouring one side over the other. "Due" means adequate or appropriate to the subject and nature of the programme. So "due impartiality" does not mean that an equal division of time has to be given to every view, or that every argument and every facet of every argument has to be represented. The approach to due impartiality may vary according to the nature of the subject, the type of programme and channel, the likely expectation of the audience as to content, and the extent to which the content and approach is signalled to the audience. Context, as defined in Section 2: Harm and Offence of the Code, is important."
"The preservation of due impartiality
5.5 Due impartiality on matters of political or industrial controversy and matters relating to current public policy must be preserved on the part of any person providing a service (listed above). This may be achieved within a programme or over a series of programmes taken as a whole.
Meaning of "series of programmes taken as a whole"
This means more than one programme in the same service, editorially linked, dealing with the same or related issues within an appropriate period and aimed at a like audience. A series can include, for example, a strand, or two programmes (such as a drama and a debate about the drama) or a 'cluster' or 'season' of programmes on the same subject
5.6 The broadcast of editorially linked programmes dealing with the same subject matter (as part of a series in which the broadcaster aims to achieve due impartiality) should normally be made clear to the audience on air.
Matters of major political and industrial controversy and major matters relating to current public policy
5.11 In addition to the rules above, due impartiality must be preserved on matters of major political and industrial controversy and major matters relating to current public policy by the person providing a service (listed above) in each programme or in clearly linked and timely programmes.
Meaning of "matters of major political or industrial controversy and major matters relating to current public policy"
These will vary according to events but are generally matters of political or industrial controversy or matters of current public policy which are of national, and often international importance, or are of similar significance within a smaller broadcast area.
5.12 In dealing with matters of major political and industrial controversy and major matters relating to current public policy an appropriately wide range of significant views must be included and given due weight in each programme or in clearly linked and timely programmes. Views and facts must not be misrepresented."
"Due weight must be given to the coverage of parties and independent candidates during the election period. In determining the appropriate level of coverage to be given to parties and independent candidates broadcasters must take into account evidence of past electoral support and/or current support. Broadcasters must also consider giving appropriate coverage to parties and independent candidates with significant views and alternatives."
"1.16 There is no obligation on broadcasters to transmit leaders' or candidates' debates. The editorial format for such debates (i.e. the manner in which a broadcaster presents a programme to the audience) is a matter for the broadcaster, and as appropriate, the relevant political parties as long as the broadcaster complies with the Code. ...
1.18 UK-based election programming (for example, UK leadership debates) can focus on those parties that have a realistic prospect of forming the UK Government following the election in question. However, in line with Rule 6.2, broadcasters must ensure that appropriate coverage is given in the same programme, or in linked programming, as appropriate, to other parties, if evidence of past electoral support means it is appropriate to do so.
1.19 It is an editorial decision for the broadcaster as to what constitutes 'appropriate coverage' in relation to Rule 6.2.
1.20 The concept of giving 'due weight', as required by Rule 6.2, is flexible. Its application depends on the electoral context."
Past Complaints
The Respective Claims
(a) The claim of the Liberal Democrats
"The Liberal Democrats, on behalf of all those who want our democracy to remain fair and balanced, are legally challenging ITV to do the right, fair and balanced thing. We need to preserve the health of our democracy, for this generation and the next."
" This was a journalistic judgement based on the combined experience and knowledge of the team and taken in the same way as any other programming decision. We aimed to devise a format that would be fair and balanced, as well as compelling, informative and what we considered our viewers would be most interested to see. We considered our past experience of ITV's previous General Election coverage and other major political programming, in particular the success of the recent head-to-head format in the Conservative leadership debate, as well as historical election results (including the previous General Elections, in addition to the more recent local and European elections), current polling, the current and past composition of the House of Commons, the parties' respective positions on Brexit and the wider political context of the General Election. Having read and carefully considered the Claimant's correspondence and Claim, there is nothing in the Claimant's evidence that is a surprise to me nor inconsistent with our considerations. None of the points the Claimant has made would cause me to come to a different conclusion than that the proposal I put forward for ITV's schedule of General Election programming is the right one."
(b) The Claim of the SNP
"The decision of ITV to exclude the leader of the SNP from the party leaders debate on prime-time television at the formative stage of the general election campaign is anathema to the requirement that those providing television programme services treat the leaders of mainstream registered political parties with due impartiality. The First Debate will be the key debate in this campaign. Excluding the leader of the SNP will serve to disadvantage the SNP vis a vis the two parties whose leaders have been invited. They will determine the content of that debate. The skewing of the electoral process which this will produce is not remedied by a late-night 10 or so minute interview. Nor will it be remedied by a debate weeks later at the end of the campaign. All that the latter does is demonstrate that the form is viable and so empties the "editorial format" pretext for its making."
The Issues
(1) Is the decision by ITV to include in its general election programming the First Debate with its proposed double-headed format a decision amenable to judicial review on public law grounds?
(2) If it is, is an adequate alternative remedy available to the claimants in the form of a complaint to Ofcom?
(3) If no such adequate alternative remedy is available, has ITV acted in breach of its obligations under s.320 of the 2003 Act and/or of the Code?
(4) Is the decision unreasonable or invalid on public law grounds?
(5) Is the decision in violation of Article 3, Protocol 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights (a point raised only by the SNP)?
The First Issue
(a) The applicable legal principles
"But in between these extremes there is an area in which it is helpful to look not just at the source of the power but at the nature of the power. If the body in question is exercising public law functions, or if the exercise of its functions have public law consequences, then that may, as Mr. Lever submitted, be sufficient to bring the body within the reach of judicial review. It may be said that to refer to "public law" in this context is to beg the question. But I do not think it does. The essential distinction, which runs through all the cases to which we referred, is between a domestic or private tribunal on the one hand and a body of persons who are under some public duty on the other. "
Statements to broadly like effect are contained in the subsequent Court of Appeal decision in R (Beer) v Hampshire Farmers' Market [2003] EWCA Civ 1935, [2004] 1 WLR 223 (see in particular paragraph 16 of the judgment of Dyson LJ).
"What can make an act, which would otherwise be private, public, is a feature or a combination of features which impose a public character or stamp on the act. Statutory authority for what is done can at least help to mark the act as being public; so can the extent of control over the function exercised by another body which is a public authority. The more closely the acts that could be of a private nature are enmeshed in the activities of a public body, the more likely they are to be public. However, the fact that the acts are supervised by a public regulatory body does not necessarily indicate that they are of a public nature. This is analogous to the position in judicial review, where a regulatory body may be deemed public but the activities of the body which is regulated may be categorised private."
"In providing care and accommodation, Southern Cross acts as a private, profit earning company. It is subject to close statutory regulation in the public interest. But so are many private occupations and businesses, with operations which may impact on members of the public in matters as diverse for example as life, health, privacy or financial well-being. Regulation by the State is no real pointer towards the person regulated being a state or governmental body or a person with a function of a public nature, if anything perhaps even the contrary. The private and commercial motivation behind Southern Cross's operations does in contrast point against treating Southern Cross as a person with a function of a public nature. Some of the particular duties which it has been suggested would follow - a duty not to close the home without regard to the Convention right to a home of publicly funded residents, and perhaps even a duty to give priority to accepting such residents into the home - fit in my view uneasily with the ordinary private law freedom to carry on operations under agreed contractual terms "
(1) The fact that a service is for the public benefit does not mean that providing the service is a public function.
(2) The fact that a function has a public connection with a statutory duty of a public body does not necessarily mean that the function is itself public.
(3) The fact that a public authority could have performed the function does not mean that the function is a public one if done by a private body.
(4) The private profit-making motivation behind a private body's operations points against treating it as a person with a function of a public nature.
(5) Functions of a public character are essentially functions which are governmental in nature.
(b) Submissions
(1) ITV, though a private company operating for commercial purposes, was operating a national free-to-air service directed at the public at large.
(2) Its broadcasting activities were the subject of statutory control.
(3) The authority to broadcast has a statutory underpinning and carries regulatory responsibilities.
(4) ITV has chosen to have a televised leaders' debate. Such debates in the course of a General Election are significant and can influence the voting intentions of the electorate.
(5) There is no private law remedy available to the claimants (in contrast to cases such as the Jockey Club, West and Holmcroft Properties).
(1) ITV is a limited company, operating commercially for profit and having paid for its licences to broadcast.
(2) The function it exercises is broadcasting that is not in any way a governmental or executive activity.
(3) Whilst the relevant network may be the product of statute, ITV itself is not.
(4) ITV cannot be said to be exercising the equivalent of any governmental or executive power or function; and cannot fairly be said to be "woven" or "enmeshed" into any system of governmental activity or control.
(5) That ITV is subject by its licences to the regulatory obligations contained in the Code cannot of itself mean that it exercises a public function.
(c) Disposal
"Ofcom isn't a censor and we don't have the powers to approve programmes before they are broadcast on TV or radio services. If you are concerned about a programme which has not yet been shown on a television, radio or on demand service you should contact the relevant broadcast or service provider."
Whilst one can very readily understand all the reasons why Ofcom would not wish to intervene in advance, this published stance would be such, if followed, as to preclude any intervention by Ofcom, even in an exceptional case (which the claimants say the present case is), prior to broadcast.
The Second Issue
The Third Issue
The Fourth Issue
The Fifth Issue
Conclusion