What the issues mentioned in Half One among this put up show above all is the complexity and issue of critiquing the OSA as a menace to completely legit types of expression when such vital elements of the mainstream media, particularly the Telegraph, Instances, Solar, Categorical, Mail and GB Information, together with stress teams such because the Free Speech Union and highly effective right-wing ‘suppose tanks’ (in precise reality, ‘free market’ lobbyists) such because the Adam Smith Institute and Coverage Trade have, in pursuit of their very own political and ideological ends, repeatedly set it up as a straw man and attacked it from the attitude of what has come to be referred to as free speech fundamentalism.
In such a state of affairs, it’s essential to level out that the fundamentalists’ conception of freedom of expression has treasured little to do with the Enlightenment values which gave rise to the notion within the first place, or with the dedication to human rights which is firmly based mostly in these values. Moderately, it’s an anglicised type of the First Modification fundamentalism promoted by Elon Musk, just lately given a substantial quantity of uncontested house within the Telegraph to denounce the OSA as ‘suppression of the individuals’.
Briefly, such fundamentalism boils all the way down to a requirement for consequence-free speech and the promotion of concepts with which the fundamentalists and libertarians agree and the marginalising, if not certainly the suppression, of these of which they disapprove. No marvel, then, that the fundamentalists’ champions on the political entrance, particularly Reform and the Tory far proper, wish to tear up the Human Rights Act and drag the UK out of the European Conference on Human Rights.
Lots of these involved with the OSA from a human rights perspective regard the net materials that has precipitated such concern as being the inevitable product of the constructions that produces it – particularly the US-based tech titans with their relentless, algorithm-driven enterprise mannequin that actively prioritises person engagement and promotes an all-out race for market share. Till the issues inherent on this mannequin are acknowledged and addressed straight, they argue, and till the tech trade is required by statute to prioritise youngsters’s security in product design and improvement, it’s extraordinarily troublesome to see how efficient on-line regulation which is genuinely within the public curiosity could be made to work within the UK. And this, once more, is a place diametrically against that of the fundamentalists and libertarians, who, as ardent ‘free marketeers’, are bitterly hostile to any type of structural regulation, which they regard not solely as oppressing the tech sector however as an illegitimate interference with market forces extra typically.
Vassalage and fealty
Such issues go a protracted approach to explaining the exceptional spectacle of politicians and papers which, previous to Brexit, continuously complained in regards to the UK being in ‘vassalage’ to the EU loudly warning the British authorities and Ofcom towards doing something by the use of regulation which might alienate the oligarchs, tech bros and president and vice-president of a overseas nation (albeit one with which we take pleasure in a so-called ‘particular relationship’).
Right here the Telegraph has actually outdone itself in fealty to the US, and has established one thing of a symbiotic relationship with Republican congressman Jim Jordan, chair of the Home Judiciary Committee. Aside from repeatedly quoting, unchallenged, his ill-informed remarks about British and EU on-line regulation, it has additionally printed emails recovered by his committee because of a subpoena to TikTok ‘concerning the corporate’s compliance with overseas censorship legal guidelines’. These had been despatched to TikTok by members of the Nationwide Safety and On-line Data Crew (characteristically described by the paper as a ‘secretive Whitehall “spy” unit’) based mostly within the Division for Science, Innovation and Expertise, and anxious posts that had been put up in the course of the disturbances following the Southport murders in July 2024. The Telegraph quotes Jordan as claiming that ‘Labour ministers had censored posts that had been crucial of the Authorities’s coverage on asylum’, however it additionally can’t resist reprinting its ‘scooped’ trophy emails in full – which present that Jordan is speaking nonsense. Within the emails, the unit identified to TikTok that there was a ‘critical danger of deceptive and false claims in relation to this incident fuelling neighborhood tensions on an area degree and the potential for additional bodily hurt’, and easily reminded the platform of its phrases of service and acknowledged its ‘proactive efforts to help native legislation enforcement’ at a time of more and more violent protests.
Extra was to return, nonetheless, on 18 August when the paper ran an entire article by Jordan and two different Republican members of his committee. This was headlined ‘We led a delegation to research Europe’s focusing on of free speech. What we noticed shocked us’, with the strap: ‘As an alternative of fixing a surging migrant disaster and stagnant financial system, the UK and EU are even attempting to censor American critics of their insurance policies’. The gist of the piece is that ‘American free speech’ is ‘in danger from overseas censorship legal guidelines that search to have world results, together with right here in america’. Extra particularly, and completely wrong-headedly, it additionally claims that the OSA ‘requires giant social media platforms to evaluate and “mitigat[e]” – that’s, censor – content material that features undefined classes of so-called disinformation and hate speech’. Really, ‘hate speech’ shouldn’t be talked about as soon as within the Act, and, as famous earlier, papers such because the Telegraph, through lobbying by the Information Media Affiliation, ensured that it comprises nearly nothing outlawing dis- or misinformation.
Additionally value mentioning on this context of fealty to the US is a Telegraph article on 13 August, headed ‘US warns of “critical restrictions” on free speech in Britain, with the strap ‘State division report reveals considerations over free speech and says UK’s “human rights state of affairs worsened” yr that Labour got here to energy’. This lavished fully uncritical protection on the US state division’s annual Human Rights Report, which claimed that, following the Southport murders final yr, the UK Authorities ‘repeatedly intervened to relax speech’ and that ‘censorship of atypical Britons was more and more routine, typically focused at political speech’. This, once more is fully misinformed, however the report’s point out of Southport supplies the paper with yet one more alternative to propagandise on behalf of its secular saint and martyr Lucy Connolly (gaoled for 31 months for inciting racial hatred within the wake of the Southport killings) and Adam Smith-Connor (convicted of breaching buffer zones outdoors UK abortion clinics, one other concern that obsesses People of a sure stripe), though neither of those was convicted below the OSA, which anyway had not come totally into drive on the time these crimes had been dedicated.
So now it’s not solely the Telegraph’s devotion to the sovereignty of the UK parliament that has been jettisoned but in addition its erstwhile arduous line on legislation and order. It isn’t alone amongst right-wing nationwide titles in turning such somersaults however it’s definitely main the acrobatic troupe.
Julian Petley is honorary and emeritus professor of journalism at Brunel College London, and the co-editor, with John Metal, of the Routledge Companion to Freedom of Expression and Censorship (2023). A daily contributor to Byline Instances and the British Journalism Evaluate, he’s additionally a member of the editorial board of the latter.


















