
The press has a big problem: Its regulator wants to be nice
Who should be the ultimate arbiter of what a news organisation should or should not be allowed to publish? Who decides whether the words on this page are appropriate or not?
Those were the questions debated by MPs this week after the UK's press regulator decided to censure The Telegraph for reporting something that had been said in Parliament.
The row over the role of the Independent Press Standards Organisation (Ipso) became so heated that Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg, the former business secretary, said on X that it 'must be abolished'.
You might wonder why you should care about a wrangle between the media and its watchdog, but the implications for the freedom of the press are far-reaching, and in turn have implications for democracy and explain why it was given time in the House of Commons.
Critics say that instead of protecting free speech, Ipso is starting to stifle it by allowing pressure groups to 'weaponise' press regulation to silence those who challenge their point of view.
There are concerns that Ipso has drifted away from its founding principles of preventing the sort of wrongful behaviour that led to the Leveson Inquiry more than a decade ago, and has instead started to insert itself in matters of taste, or issues that are best left to the courts.
For anyone new to this story, the row began after Ipso upheld a complaint by the Muslim Association of Britain (MAB) over a report that quoted Michael Gove, the former communities secretary, telling Parliament that the MAB was 'affiliated' to the Muslim Brotherhood, an organisation banned as a terrorist group in some countries.
Ipso ruled that despite Gove's comments being made under parliamentary privilege, The Telegraph 's account of those comments in a subsequent story in January 2025 was misleading because it failed to include a response from the MAB, which denies any affiliation with the Muslim Brotherhood.
The ruling came despite there being no obligation for a publisher to seek a response when reporting the workings of Parliament, provided that care is taken not to publish 'inaccurate, misleading or distorted information'.
Gove has suggested that such rulings risk having a chilling effect on journalism, because reporters will feel less inclined to report freely on the workings of Parliament for fear of being reprimanded by the regulator.
In another recent ruling, Ipso censured The Spectator magazine (which Gove now edits) for allowing one of its writers to describe a transgender author as 'a man who claims to be a woman'. Since then the Supreme Court has ruled that trans women are not legally women, suggesting that if the person who complained to Ipso had taken their case to court they would have lost.
Lord Young, the founder of the Free Speech Union, says: 'Ipso has certainly made some eccentric decisions recently. It's as though Ipso now regards freedom of expression as being less important than protecting minority groups from being offended, and that is a significant shift that has taken place over the past 10 years.'
Ipso is an independent body whose members, including The Telegraph, volunteered to be regulated by it after it was set up in the wake of the Leveson Inquiry to replace the Press Complaints Commission, which had been criticised for failing to prevent the News International phone hacking scandal.
Its focus was originally on preventing the sort of invasions of privacy and illegal behaviour that led to the Leveson Inquiry, but it increasingly acts as an arbiter of what is or is not in the public interest.
As a result, says Lord Young: 'Various activist groups have become very good at weaponising Ipso to silence their critics.'
There are also concerns from Lord Young and others that by presenting campaign groups with a 'win' by finding against news organisations on often highly technical grounds, Ipso will make its own job much harder by encouraging complainants to bombard it with accusations against the press.
In its ruling against The Telegraph, Ipso acknowledged that 'the article had accurately reported Gove's comments' in which he linked the MAB to the Muslim Brotherhood in Parliament, but this 'could lead readers to believe that the allegation had gone unchallenged and is accepted'.
A reporter paying attention to this ruling might interpret this to mean that they must seek comment from anyone who is the subject of a contentious statement in Parliament, which, as several MPs have pointed out, is at odds with the legal protections given to the reporting of parliamentary proceedings and might interfere with the speedy reporting of them. Reporters might, for example, be left wondering whether they are obliged to seek a comment from Hamas every time it is described in Parliament as a terrorist organisation.
The former Cabinet minister Sir David Davis is so concerned about this that he and two other former ministers this week urged the parliamentary authorities to investigate whether Ipso has undermined free speech with its ruling.
In finding against The Spectator, Ipso ruled that the magazine had not breached rules on accuracy because the columnist who referred to 'a man who claims to be a woman' was expressing a view to which they were entitled. However, Ipso decided that the description was 'belittling and demeaning toward the complainant' and upheld the complaint that it amounted to a 'prejudicial or pejorative reference' to their gender identity and 'was not justified by the columnist's right to express their views on the broader issues of sex and gender identity'.
In other words, the columnist has every right to hold their view, but it is trumped by the complainant's hurt feelings. News organisations have always operated on the basis that they have a right to cause offence, but any journalist reading that adjudication might conclude that their regulator is moved above all by the desire to be nice.
A free press, and a press regulator that is independent of government, are vital components of a healthy democracy.
But, says Lord Young: 'If Ipso continues to deprioritise freedom of expression then key members will eventually leave and Ipso will inevitably collapse.
'That would be disastrous because it would give the Government the excuse to bring in state regulation of the press.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
6 days ago
- Daily Mirror
Zelensky: Ukraine's drone strike on 40 Russian planes organised next to FSB HQ
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has revealed that a drone strike which wiped out 40 Russian aircraft, including "irreplaceable" nuclear-capable warplanes, was launched from inside Russia Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has unveiled that a catastrophic drone attack, which decimated more than 40 Russian planes including the precious nuclear-ready warbirds, was masterminded from Russia itself, right under the noses of the Kremlin's formidable security forces. The audacious strike, responsible for a mammoth $7 billion in losses, involved 117 drones and ravaged Russia's air strength, knocking out 34 percent of its vital cruise missile carriers. In an extraordinary revelation on his official X account, President Zelensky detailed the assault, hailing it as a tremendous victory following over 18 months of preparation. Observers have likened the shock tactic to "Russia's Pearl Harbor," reminiscent of the unforeseen blow dealt to the American fleet by Japan during World War II. He declared: "Today, a brilliant operation was carried out. The preparation took over a year and a half. What's most interesting, is that the 'office' of our operation on Russian territory was located directly next to FSB headquarters in one of their regions." This meticulously executed mission struck a severe punch to Russian military capacities. With each drone reportedly controlled independently, the operation showcased immense ingenuity and synchronisation, reports the Express. Zelensky emphasised: "We will continue this work." The daring operation reportedly utilised first-person-view (FPV) kamikaze drones, cunningly concealed within containers on lorries. The Telegraph reports that the lids of these containers were remotely lifted once in place, enabling the drones to take off and target aircraft at several high-security Russian airbases. Online footage allegedly shows planes being hit at the Belaya airbase in Siberia - an astonishing 3,400 miles from the Ukrainian front line - highlighting the remarkable scope of the attack. Other bases targeted in this synchronised strike are said to include Olenya airbase in the Arctic, the Ivanovo base northeast of Moscow, and Dyagilevo base, south of the Russian capital. Military insiders estimate that at least 40 aircraft were likely obliterated in total, dealing a devastating blow to Russia's strategic bomber fleet and its long-range cruise missile capabilities. This strike is being celebrated as one of the most significant Ukrainian operations of the war, both in terms of scale and strategic impact.


North Wales Chronicle
7 days ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Tories in call to arm specialist prison officers to counter Islamist gangs
Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick said specialist teams should be armed with Tasers, stun grenades, and in some circumstances, lethal weapons. He also called for high-collar stab vests to be provided to frontline officers right away, citing the threat from inmates after recent attacks on prison officers. 'Islamist gangs and violent prisoners in our jails are out of control. It's a national security emergency, but the Government is dithering. 'If they don't act soon, there is a very real risk that a prison officer is kidnapped or murdered in the line of duty, or that a terrorist attack is directed from inside prison,' he wrote in The Telegraph. He said he had commissioned former prison governor Ian Acheson to carry out a rapid review. 'We have to stop pussy-footing around Islamist extremists and violent offenders in jails,' he wrote. 'That means arming specialist prison officer teams with Tasers and stun grenades, as well as giving them access to lethal weapons in exceptional circumstances. 'If prison governors can't easily keep terrorist influencers and radicalising inmates apart from the mainstream prisoners they target, then we don't control our prisons – they do. We must take back control and restore order by giving officers the powers and protection they need.' It come after attacks by high-profile inmates. Manchester Arena plotter Hashem Abedi targeted prison staff with boiling oil and homemade weapons in a planned ambush last month. Southport killer Axel Rudakubana allegedly attacked a prison officer at HMP Belmarsh earlier this month by pouring boiling water over them. Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood has ordered a snap review into whether stab vests should be used more routinely, and a trial that will give specialised officers dealing with serious incidents Tasers is due to be launched this summer. Officers already have access to batons and Pava spray, a synthetic form of pepper spray, in men's prisons in the public sector. A Ministry of Justice source said the Government has a 'zero-tolerance approach' to violence and extremism in prisons. 'The last Government added just 500 cells to our prison estate, and left our jails in total crisis. In fourteen years, they closed 1,600 cells in the high-security estate, staff assaults soared, and experienced officers left in droves. Now the arsonists are pretending to be firefighters. 'This Government is cleaning up the mess the last Government left behind. We are building new prisons, with 2,400 new cells opened since we took office. And we take a zero-tolerance approach to violence and extremism inside.'


Powys County Times
31-05-2025
- Powys County Times
Tories in call to arm specialist prison officers to counter Islamist gangs
The Conservatives have called for some prison officers to have access to firearms to counter 'out of control' Islamist gangs and violent prisoners. Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick said specialist teams should be armed with Tasers, stun grenades, and in some circumstances, lethal weapons. He also called for high-collar stab vests to be provided to frontline officers right away, citing the threat from inmates after recent attacks on prison officers. 'Islamist gangs and violent prisoners in our jails are out of control. It's a national security emergency, but the Government is dithering. 'If they don't act soon, there is a very real risk that a prison officer is kidnapped or murdered in the line of duty, or that a terrorist attack is directed from inside prison,' he wrote in The Telegraph. He said he had commissioned former prison governor Ian Acheson to carry out a rapid review. 'We have to stop pussy-footing around Islamist extremists and violent offenders in jails,' he wrote. 'That means arming specialist prison officer teams with Tasers and stun grenades, as well as giving them access to lethal weapons in exceptional circumstances. 'If prison governors can't easily keep terrorist influencers and radicalising inmates apart from the mainstream prisoners they target, then we don't control our prisons – they do. We must take back control and restore order by giving officers the powers and protection they need.' It come after attacks by high-profile inmates. Manchester Arena plotter Hashem Abedi targeted prison staff with boiling oil and homemade weapons in a planned ambush last month. Southport killer Axel Rudakubana allegedly attacked a prison officer at HMP Belmarsh earlier this month by pouring boiling water over them. Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood has ordered a snap review into whether stab vests should be used more routinely, and a trial that will give specialised officers dealing with serious incidents Tasers is due to be launched this summer. Officers already have access to batons and Pava spray, a synthetic form of pepper spray, in men's prisons in the public sector. A Ministry of Justice source said the Government has a 'zero-tolerance approach' to violence and extremism in prisons. 'The last Government added just 500 cells to our prison estate, and left our jails in total crisis. In fourteen years, they closed 1,600 cells in the high-security estate, staff assaults soared, and experienced officers left in droves. Now the arsonists are pretending to be firefighters. 'This Government is cleaning up the mess the last Government left behind. We are building new prisons, with 2,400 new cells opened since we took office. And we take a zero-tolerance approach to violence and extremism inside.'