Wednesday 11 September 2013

Laying down a few ground rules



Next Monday's Panorama, Tax, Lies and Videotape, will be going undercover in the City of London, in pursuit of tax avoidance by big companies.

It's a favourite theme for Panorama. (See, for example, here or here or here or here). 

It's to be hoped that their investigation will be fair and factual, and a good test of that will be their choice of 'talking heads'. 

There is, of course, absolutely nothing wrong with using anti-tax avoidance campaigners, such as those from the Tax Justice Network, as 'talking heads'. They are a key voice in the debate over tax avoidance. 

What would be wrong, however, would be to present them as independent, disinterested tax experts (i.e. as the kind of people viewers can trust not to be spinning them a line). 

Unfortunately, Panorama has sinned before in that regard before, as I've blogged previously

They once used not one but two Tax Justice Network campaigners as 'talking heads' in a single programme, labelling one of them as a "professor of accountancy" and the other as a "financial journalist". Their affiliation to the Tax Justice Network was never mentioned. 

So look out for the names Richard Murphy, Nicholas Shaxson and Prem Sikka. If any of these people appear, and if they are introduced by the presenter as some kind of independent expert, or labelled on screen as some kind of independent expert, then Panorama is at it again. 

Also look out for the name of their campaigning colleague at Private Eye, Richard Brooks. 

Time will tell whether this coming Panorama will prove to be a beacon of firm-but-fair investigative journalism, or a piece of campaigning journalism instead. 

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