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Bristol Post
Bristol Post
National
bristolpost Administrator

Greens hit out at mayor's 'weak leadership' over reporter ban

The Green Party has accused mayor Marvin Rees of 'weak leadership' and 'attempting to hide from accountability' over his ban on Local Democracy Reporters attending his fortnightly briefing. It comes after the BBC-funded reporters at Bristol Live were told they were not welcome at the press conference.

That has led to a boycott by Bristol Live and organisations including the BBC, ITV, Bristol 24/7 and Bristol World. The move followed a briefing where an LDR's right to ask about Mr Rees' air travel to a TED talk in Vancouver on climate change was called into question.

Green councillor Ed Plowden said: “This disgraceful action is particularly concerning, given that the Council's publicly funded Press Office is supporting this behaviour, when its job is to serve the City and people of Bristol, not to support partisan politics or prop up the fragile ego of a single politician. I have tabled a motion calling on the Council's legal department to examine the role of the Council’s Press Office in light of this situation.

READ MORE: Bristol Live boycott of mayor's briefings over reporter ban wins support from city and beyond

“This action brings the city into disrepute and is reflective of a model of leadership that the City has rejected. Attempting to hide from accountability is weak leadership. Attacking the person asking the questions is part of a political playbook that we have seen too much of in Bristol and across the world. Along with Carla Denyer, members of the public and even NHS doctors, I too have been personally attacked and belittled as a tactic to avoid answering probing questions.

“I am looking forward to a new era of politics in Bristol now that the public have rejected the Mayoral model. I call on the Mayor to reflect and summon the strength to admit he made the wrong call and reverse this decision.”

The Greens have tabled a motion for the next council meeting on Tuesday, July 5, calling for:

- The press office should reinstate access to the LDRS to all press opportunities.

- The monitoring officer be instructed to examine how the administration’s decision sits with the relevant Codes of Conduct for officers and the Mayor/politicians.

- If necessary to instruct the CEO to review council policies to ensure that the role of the Press Office is depoliticised so as to be focused on serving the needs of the City and people of Bristol.

Fellow Green Carla Denyer said: “Local Democracy Reporters provide a tremendously important service for local journalism, attending council meetings, digging into detail to find stories, and holding politicians – of all stripes – to account. I think it’s outrageous that the Mayor has banned these reporters from his regular press conferences.

READ MORE: Local Democracy Reporter praised for challenging Bristol Mayor over TED talk air travel

"It’s behaviour that the National Union of Journalists has rightly condemned as “arrogant, high-handed, and essentially anti-democratic.” And unfortunately it’s part of a pattern we have seen from the Mayor of resistance and hostility to being asked honest questions - one that many councillors, journalists, residents and even NHS workers in Bristol have been on the receiving end of - including myself. This isn’t even the first time Marvin Rees has attacked a local democracy reporter for doing their job.

“Journalists asking politicians difficult questions is both a fact of life and an essential part of a healthy democracy – one that as co-leader of the Green party I have to prepare for most days. Most of us accept that it’s important for those in power to be publicly held to account, and that democracy suffers when they try to pick and choose what questions they can be asked.

“So it’s been really heartening to see journalists from other outlets stand up for the LDR service, with almost all of Bristol’s media outfits now boycotting these briefings in solidarity – just as national media did after Boris Johnson’s team tried to expel journalists from briefings at Number 10. Ultimately I believe the Mayor’s approach will be self-defeating – you don’t win a debate by suppressing discussion, you win it with a better argument.

“The Mayor has a chance to change the story – he could take responsibility for his actions, apologise and accept that this was the wrong thing to do, that there are no ‘wrong questions’ for journalists (or councillors, or the public) to ask Bristol’s Mayor. This would go a long way to undoing the damage done by his actions.”

Due to time constraints, the Greens' motion is unlikely to be debated at the meeting

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