Michelle Guthrie:Sacked from the ABC.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
The outgoing managing director was neither a skilled political operative like her predecessor Mark Scott,nor a program maker or journalist. She couldn’t defend the most important output of the corporation,its journalism,because she just didn’t get it.
There are strong parallels with the appointment by the Howard government of Jonathan Shier. Arguably an even more left-field choice than Guthrie,Shier lasted less than two years. What they shared was an implicit brief to disrupt the ABC,dismantle internal fiefdoms and,importantly,bring the news and current affairs division under control.
Make no mistake,federal governments,regardless of political complexion,don’t care about Peppa Pig. They care about political coverage by the ABC’s journalists and broadcasters.
Persistent and strident complaints about the ABC’s political coverage have clearly had an impact on the ABC’s news division. Quite apart from job losses that have resulted in some state newsrooms struggling to get TV news bulletins to air,the place seems to have a scarcity of editorial maturity and leadership.
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The decision to return the contents of the"lost filing cabinet"to the Commonwealth,contents that were assessed as a treasure trove of important stories,left many ABC journalists completely bewildered.
Then there is the defence ofAndrew Probyn’s story on the alleged Murdoch/Stokes conspiracy to unseat the former Prime Minister. Would a seasoned director of news choose to run that story,even if the primary source was the former PM himself,without some other corroborating evidence?
The 7pm news bulletins,still produced in each state,while not the ratings powerhouse they once were,remain incredibly important and very much the flagship of the corporation’s free-to-air television output. These days the bulletins seem thin and under-resourced,editorial values hard to guess and state content arbitrary. Most of the important decisions about what leads in the bulletins around the country are made in Sydney.