You have probably heard this one before but it bears repeating in light of recent events at a post-Cabinet propaganda session. When I was a dibby reporter I was sent to cover your basic placard school protest outside of the Ministry of Education. When I got there all of the parents sitting vex on the pavement in front of the ministry waiting for us to arrive.
Typically a protest would not start until they saw the camera equipment being rolled out. At times we were tempted to simply drive past, obscured from view by the dark tint. That way the protest never really happened. If a tree falls in the forest... On this day I didn't, I returned to the office with the story and sat down before an ancient typewriter to klax! klax! klax! my soporific tale. My head of news with slick, rockabilly hairdo and gravely, two-pack-a-day voice, summons me into his office and seated there in an almost un-navigable fog of cigarette smoke was the then Minister of Education. "Paolo, the minister would like to see your script." I handed it to him, so naive was I, thinking that he had come to offer his official response. The minister barely gets past the first line before he says, "No this is not your story, I will tell you what your story is." Thoroughly emasculated, I returned to my desk now a eunuch reporter.
It was Public Administration Minister Kennedy Swaratsingh, once a man of the cloth now a man of the balisier, who reminded me of this incident. You know, if journalists and politicians understood each other's respective roles, the confusion and vitriol would not have been necessary. It amazes me that reporters attend these post-Cabinet brainwashing sessions expecting to wring some sort of news content out of them. Swaratsingh bellows from the podium, "It always amazes me that you choose to spend the post-Cabinet news conference thinking about what you want to ask a person who is not present!" Well, it amazes me that he thinks we don't know that these ministers are made to be absent so that no one has to hand around the Udecott hot potato. That has to rank high among some of the most irretrievably stupid remarks I've heard in my lifetime. It is obvious that if the pressing matter is Udecott, journalists will come armed with relevant questions, whether or not the line minister is asked to wait in the broom closet until the conference is over.
This has always been the case. When people are being felled across the country by gunfire, Martin Joseph disappears. When there is a brief lull, he resurfaces at the post-Cabinet hypnosis session to yammer on about meaningless statistics and to remind us how unhappy he is with the murder rate. Whenever there is a controversial issue engaging the Government, they shove the poor Education Minister onto the podium. Also making regular appearances is Cabinet favourite, Public Utilities Minister Mustapha Abdul-Hamid, who is almost never likely to have any serious inquiry aimed at him.
Then of course there is the ultimate blocker, Neil Parsanlal, whose sole responsibility, it seems, is to deflect questions, criticise the media, and deliver ill-informed and torturous lectures on media standards.
Swaratsingh continues, "Unfortunately, you do not get to make those decisions as to who comes to the post-Cabinet news conference..." And therein lies the secret to a reporter's happiness: understanding that the post-Cabinet news conference is primarily a mechanism by which the Government uses you to spread its good-news message to the people. This was never conceived as an opportunity to prod the administration over issues which ultimately concern the public. As for the politicians, when they are able to understand that not every reporter in this country is employed by the Government Information Service, that the responsibility of the media (in my opinion) is to provide citizens with accurate information about the Government's handling of the country, then we can see the beginning of a different kind of relationship. We are not here to broadcast beaming smiles at yet another ribbon-cutting, another sod-turning, another standpipe-opening!
Right now the honeymoon is over for President Barack Obama in the US and now he is engaged in the business of a bitter marriage with the Fox News Network. The administration has taken a decision to resist appearing on any television programmes produced by that network, instead opting to shuttle the movie star President off to yet another appearance on the David Letterman Show. This particular news network, which is the established and unabashed bullhorn for the Republican Party, is pursing a campaign to foment public animus over the President's boycott of the network. Most media analysts in the States agree that it is a decidedly reckless move on the part of the White House. Fox can use this to ignite a cause among its constituents; and if Obama truly believes that the network's viewers are primarily jerky chompin', deer shootin', Bible thumpin' cretins, then he is in for a rough term in office. The media landscape has changed in this country and media houses are simply no longer prepared to tolerate a minister bawling behind journalists.
Mr Swaratsingh, there is also something that you need to consider: you could "cuss way" the media all you want, but the new generation of blogger has moved commentary from the conventional format. This means that everyone is a journalist and the Internet's viral nature can spread discontent faster than traditional broadcast and print media. So allyuh go ahead! You politicians continue to make one fundamental mistake. In denying the media you believe that you are keeping your boot on a recalcitrant minority; but when you douse that small fire, you inflame the public because they are who we represent. So continue to send irrelevant ministers to the podium if you tink de people so chupid!