Thursday, July 13, 2006

The weakest link

Michael Laws, Mayor, WanganuiDo not adjust your hearing aid.

Watchers expecting hear the celebratory popping of corks from the direction of the LawsWatch Cave at the news of Mr Maslin's sidelining from captaining the team at the Chron haven't suddenly gone deaf.

A commenter even suggests that his standing aside makes him the first "victim" of LawsWatch and asks "is that acceptable collateral damage?"

Equally, we could ask whether he's simply yet another victim of Michael Laws, since it's only a matter of a couple of weeks ago that Maslin canned the Mayor's self-indulgent ramblings after they stepped well outside the agreed bounds.

Perhaps the apoplectic Mayoral backlash led the APN coaches to call for a substitution, or perhaps it was too little too late. Only Mr Maslin and his bosses know which, if either, scenario is correct.

There is no doubt John Maslin had to go. He was widely perceived as hopelessly compromised by having kowtowed to Michael Laws far too often. His recent burst of independence came far too late for most readers, who may well refer to the Chron as "their" paper, as APN boss Andy Jarden claimed this morning, but who've grown to doubt its credibility - and not just on Council issues - under Maslin's editorship.

And when tortuosity like this makes it into the newspaper:

"And to quieten the doubters Ms Patrick took the horse by the tail and put it firmly in front of the cart when she said this was the best practice model... but now the audience had a toe in the water and the tide turned..."
...then the Editor's hand isn't on the tiller when the ship navigates the dangerous shoals of journalism, running aground on the reef of cliché. So to speak.

Not to mention letting go entirely unchallenged statements such as "this is the best practice model" when referring to events which caused an entire trust board to resign, have seen a gallery curatorial position disestablished and have put the local arts establishment into an uproar. Whose idea of best practice? What studies or experts support this assertion? What other examples can Ms Patrick offer of an arts facility being "restructured" in this way and emerging from the process better than it was before?

A good newspaper doesn't just regurgitate the words uttered by others, marinated in cliché and boxed by Sudoku, lost animal pics and advertisements. It investigates. It questions. It takes nothing at face value - especially not statements from politicians and public servants.

Editing a newspaper - particularly a provincial daily - is a thankless task. Get it right and at best, no one complains. Get it wrong and everyone does. Unlike the editor of the NZ Herald - and quick, without looking it up, how many can even tell us who that is? - a provincial newspaper editor is recognisable and accessible to his or her readers.

Inevitably, that leads to lobbying from every lunatic with an agenda, who then invents a conspiracy to explain why their tinfoil hat theory has been "suppressed". A Watcher who's held a similar position to Mr Maslin recalls one particularly disgruntled reader endeavouring to climb through his first floor office window, presumably to lodge a complaint.

But when a lunatic with an agenda happens to become the town's First Citizen, the editor's job becomes a difficult and doubly thankless task. Mr Maslin didn't acquit himself well when facing up to the noisily public and more insidious private pressure exerted by Michael Laws - but then, to be fair, not a lot of people have in the past, either.

What the Chronicle now needs - what Wanganui now needs - is for APN to find themselves a senior journalist with not only the experience but also the strength of character that's needed to manage a newspaper in a town where Michael Laws's divisiveness means that not only does he apply unconscionable pressure to the editor, but his opponents are driven to respond in kind. Such journalists are out there, but they're in senior roles and APN aren't exactly renowned for the level of salary they're prepared to offer. And while Maslin may have been the weakest link, but the rest of the chain - a proprietor interested more in money than in quality journalism and an inexperienced, uncritical writing staff - isn't too strong either.

However, as Mr Jarden proudly notes, the Chron is New Zealand's oldest newspaper. The grand old dame surely deserves better treatment from her owners.

Comments on this post are now closed.

18 comments:

Anonymous said...

All right, I'll do it. All I ask is $100,000 a year, a decent expense account and a proper car. I'll take that big a cut in my salary to save poor Wanganui...:)
But if I do, there will be a lot of reporters looking for other jobs....

Anonymous said...

Wouldn't the bigger lunatics be those who took Mr Maslin to the Press Council, but had their complaints rejected?

And isn't the instigator of that complaint a Watcher not a mayoral devotee although, conceivably, she might be both.

Anonymous said...

$100,000? Halve that salary and you'll get closer to a senior journo's salary. John Maslin would not have been on much more.

Anonymous said...

Wouldn't the bigger lunatics be those who took Mr Maslin to the Press Council, but had their complaints rejected?
-----------------------------------

The Press Council considers a very narrow range of quasi-legal matters when adjudicating.

The owners of a newspaper, however, are free to consider a much wider range of factors, such as what happens to their paper's credibility when its editor and the local Mayor are like Siamese twins, joined skull-to-hip.

Anonymous said...

There's no proof that John Maslin and Michael Laws were ever travelling companions; in fact, plenty of proof for the opposite.

Maslin was critical of Laws before the election - editorially - and ran three separate news stories on the '96 resignation including a copy (after legal advice) of Cr John Harrison's condemnatory letter.

If you review Mas' editorials, he never (and I mean never) praised Laws. I've never bought the conspiracy theory peddled in here: Maslin was trying to balance things and I can remember another anti-Laws front page editorial over the Sarjeant trust board sacking. Add the withdrawal of the mayoral column - twice - and I think Watchers are being very, very unfair. Laws was just smart enough to work and walk around Maslin. He is the Spin Genius after all and he is good at it.

If you want the real reason you should look at the internal workings of the Chronicle. There's no mystery that the newsdesk there has been dysfunctional for years. If you ask any of the younger reporters there they'll say its like working in a warzone.

Anonymous said...

the instigator of that complaint a Watcher
___________________________________

Riiiiiight, so it was this anonymous "Watcher" that drove the management of APN to their decision.

Mickey, try a course of neuroleptics. They're perfect for your malaise.

Anonymous said...

Get this: generally speaking, politicians complain to owners of newspapers about editors who publish inconvenient factoids.

Here in Wanganui, we have newspaper owners who wish the editor would stop scoffing mayoral plop and then turning to us with a straight face, brown lips and all, and declaiming "it's yum". So they encouraged his departure. Or whatever.

At least they didn't call him a useless Cuncillor.

Anonymous said...

God of hacknews
On thy knees
Take a moment to ask please
Why does Mickey Mayor sneeze
If you are not listening?

Ask yourself why do you write
Unconstrained by mayoral shite
If you question not a mite
Of his press releases?

Vague allusions will not do
He may turn and try to screw
Anything you say that's true
Lest you tape record him.

There's a moral to this tale
Ridicule his tripe and flail
Satirise his lonely tale
Always take the Mickey.

TAPLOL

Laws Watch said...

I think Watchers are being very, very unfair.

Well, anon, we did say "There is no doubt John Maslin had to go. He was widely perceived as hopelessly compromised by having kowtowed to Michael Laws far too often." (our later emphasis)

Sadly, since we live in a town which is only too happy to uncritically accept spin as fact, perception = reality. Whether Maslin bowed, or Laws forced his head down, matters for nought at the end of the day. The net result was that editorial independence was compromised.

Laws was just smart enough to work and walk around Maslin.

Couldn't have said it better ourselves, anon. So the important thing to focus on now is that his successor has more brains (if we accept your viewpoint) or more backbone (if you accept ours). Or ideally, both.

Anonymous said...

This should do wonders for APN's shareprice ... but what a strange to-do that the mayor should be crediting this humble website, so often the subject of his derision, with the power to bring down an editor.

It seems this is one editor who brought himself down, with a lot of help from his buddy at 101 Guyton St.

Anonymous said...

Minister of Civil Defence the Hon. Rick Barker this afternoon contacted Wanganui Mayor Michael Laws to tell him that the government would professionally design, erect and fully fund a Bailey Bridge across the Mangawhero River for the isolated Mangamahu community.

Transit NZ will professionally design and erect the bridge and Land Transport NZ will fully fund the temporary bridge.

“All I could say was ‘wow!’ and ‘thank you’ when Rick called,” Mayor Laws said.

“I’m not sure if I offered to have his baby but I was pretty damned excited on behalf of the Mangamahu community. It’s an outstanding result that directly led from the Minister’s visit to Wanganui yesterday. Rick Barker deserves every credit – he has been absolutely fantastic.”

Mayor Laws said Transit engineers will be in contact with Wanganui District Council engineers within the next 24 hours to organise the placement of the bridge.

“The funding of the final bridge will remain a matter of negotiation between LTNZ and ourselves but today’s result will dispel many fears in the Mangamahu community and ensure that life can return pretty much to normal.”

Mayor Laws said that he had worked with Rick Barker on many regional issues when they had been the MPs for Hawke’s Bay and Hastings respectively “and I always found Rick straight up and prepared to drop the party label. Those qualities shine through in the Minister’s decision today. He’s a great guy”.

------

ok - my bet is less than 2 weeks before 'rick'the good guy will be 'rick'the prick and laws starts to assasinate barker

Anonymous said...

why are there no reports on council meetings anymore, LW?

Laws Watch said...

Council last met on July 3 and doesn't meet again till 14 August, anon.

Anonymous said...

Mickey's spin machine seems to be losing bits left right and centre. First the Spin Fairy implodes and the CEO strips the mayor of his "executive media assistant" so he ends up with his little radio ingenue under Sue Dudman's control.

Then the Fairy Godmother gets the heave.

Now his pet editor gets the shove.

And he's got no one to blame but himself. Oh dear how sad never mind Mickey.

Anonymous said...

Bob Harvey - former Labour Party president and mayor of Waitakere - praising ML in his latest e-column. What's THAT about?

Anonymous said...

How long before Dotty does a Peter Costello, do you reckon, and reminds Mickey of his assurances of her imminent mayordom? Or perhaps she already has, and that's why she's acting so antsy.

Anonymous said...

on the mangamahu issue, i could be wrong but isn't mangamahu in the rangeitiki district council region?

or is this another one of those blurred boundary things.

Anonymous said...

anon @ 12.15pm
yeah you are wrong
as for LawsWatch -
all the real council stuff happens in committees and council just rubberstamps that. i'm with the earlier poster: where's the council stuff?