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Tuesday, January 20, 1998 Published at 18:06 GMT UK: Politics Mixed response to party broadcast plans Tony Blair picture in a Labour party election broadcast
The news that the BBC and Independent Television Commission are planning to scrap party political broadcasts outside of election time has prompted a mixed reaction from polititians.
The Minister Without Portfolio, Peter Mandelson, said: "Millions and millions of
British citizens look at these broadcasts and listen to what the politicians
have to say throughout the year. Now that is their democratic right."
But he said: "They do provide an opportunity for politicians to have a direct
link with the people who vote for them."
The Liberal Democrats, he said, valued the broadcasts more because they did not have
the "uncritical support" of any national newspaper or the "massive
advertising budgets of the other two parties".
But he added: "Liberal Democrats are receptive to new thinking about party
political broadcasts. We accept that the current rules may be somewhat long in
the tooth and that there is scope for innovation.
The leader of the opposition, William Hague said he thought the idea to limit Party political broadcasts to election times sounded sensible.
He said: "To have broadcasts, to have them at elections rather than between
elections, is probably more interesting for the viewer and the voter and
probably more useful for the political parties, so, subject to the detail of what is in the report, in the recommendations, I think we would give them a fair wind."
She said it was not about ratings and the consultation document included the
basic view that political parties had a right to free air time - separate from
current affairs programmes - at election time.
The argument outlined in the joint consultation document by the BBC and the ITC - which governs UK commercial television - is simply that viewers are not interested.
As well as ending political broadcasts, the TV companies suggest reducing the length of election broadcasts from 10 minutes to around three.
Shorter broadcasts, they add, would merely encourage negative campaigning.
But if the political broadcast does come to an end, it may bring about the beginning of paid for adverts by parties, something until now unknown in the United Kingdom.
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