Julian Huppert
Main Page: Julian Huppert (Liberal Democrat - Cambridge)As always, my right hon. Friend cuts to the quick with a question that is important to many of us. If he examines the detail of our provisions and exemptions, and the Leveson report, he will see that the intention behind everything that we are doing is to focus self-regulation on those who publish news. I do not believe that any political party or MP intends primarily to publish news. That will be secondary, so it is not our intention that such websites should be the primary focus of the provisions. Obviously, there will be areas in the margins that need further clarification, and the courts will be able to provide that over time.
I am pleased that we are able to examine these details, because there has been much concern. I would be grateful for guidance on a few specific issues about how the provisions should be interpreted. For example, a lot of multi-author blogs involve people who are self-employed or who work on a voluntary basis. How should the number of employees be dealt with? Will the Secretary of State provide guidance on that, and on what the definition of a blog is?
It will be full-time employees who are included in the employment measure, which is why it is important that not just employment but turnover is considered. Many organisations utilise a number of self-employed people, hence the twin-track approach.
We have set out what we anticipate being considered a blog, which is about individual opinion being set forth through electronic media. That is relatively straightforward, although as I said to my right hon. Friend the Member for Wokingham (Mr Redwood), there will always be more difficult matters to consider at the margins and the courts will be able to provide further information. We will also provide guidance in the usual way.
The amendments address concerns raised by small-scale bloggers and other small businesses and will ensure that the definition of “relevant publisher” captures the news publishers that were the focus of Lord Justice Leveson’s inquiry. They have the full support of all three major parties in the House, and on that basis I commend them to the House.
I do not wish to detain the House long but I am pleased that we have finally reached this point and that important details of Leveson are agreed. If I had been asked when I first looked at the Crime and Courts Bill which part I thought would keep us in ping-pong, it would not have been this provision or anything to do with blogs. I do not know whether the hon. Member for Bishop Auckland (Helen Goodman) was referring to me as a middle-aged man. I am the proud holder of a Liberal Democrat Voice “blogger of the year” award, but even I would have struggled desperately to write this provision or make all the definitions. I hope that the Secretary of State has been able to be clear. There will be people who try to game this, but that is true of all legislation. I hope that the Bill has been made as game-proof as possible, while preserving the pleasure of the games that people play on blogs. I am delighted that we are at this point and I will not take up any more of the House’s time. I look forward to the Bill being enacted and I hope that the Secretary of State will clarify those few remaining points.
I thank the hon. Member for Bishop Auckland (Helen Goodman) for her helpful support as we try to resolve the final details of the Bill. Hon. Members have raised a number of issues in the short period that we have to debate the Bill, and hopefully I can resolve them to everybody’s satisfaction.
I think that by “gaming” the hon. Lady meant the ability of companies to try to buck the system we have set up. It is always difficult to give a categorical assurance on that, but I think our approach minimises the risk of organisations taking such an approach. We have minimised the risk by using the definition of a micro-business, which does not just consider one element—staff—but staff and turnover. Therefore, if an organisation decided to ensure that all its staff were freelancers, it could not then play with its turnover in a way that would make it a micro-business. Equally, individual businesses will find it difficult to disaggregate their businesses in a way that would leave them registered as micro-businesses, and then duck the system without compromising the way in which they operate on a day-to-day basis. Furthermore, a court will be capable of looking at the facts of a case to see whether an organisation has attempted to get around the rules, and that would be a material consideration. If an organisation was trying to circumvent the rules in the way it structured itself, the usual sanctions would be available.
We are interested in many different organisations, but particularly campaigning groups. A number of other exemptions already exist in the definition of “relevant publisher” that deal with campaigning newsletters—a point that the right hon. and learned Member for Camberwell and Peckham (Ms Harman) and I have discussed on a number of occasions. A public body or charity that publishes news-related material in connection with carrying out its functions, or a person who publishes a newsletter, circular or other document relating to their business that contains news-related material only incidentally, will not be caught by the self-regulatory approach. Such things will be exempt from these measures, which is important. News, and the delivery and publication of news, is not central to a company’s business, and I underline that point for all questions raised by hon. Members. Hopefully, that will provide some certainty on campaigning groups.
The fourth point raised by the hon. Member for Bishop Auckland was access to arbitration for those that may not be termed as “relevant publishers”, other than those that are micro-businesses—excuse me, Mr Deputy Speaker, for getting into the weeds with this, but it is necessary to answer the hon. Lady’s questions. Our consideration of micro-businesses in connection with blogging was to ensure that we did not unintentionally capture those businesses within the self-regulatory system, and also to ensure that those businesses were able—should they choose—to opt in to the self-regulatory part of the framework if they felt that was beneficial. It was never our intention more broadly to allow people to become a “relevant publisher”, not least because that would be outside the scope of today’s discussions. It is not our intention to allow people who are not relevant publishers in that way to have access to that status over and above the exemption we have outlined. Anything to do with the running of the self-regulatory regime is for the press to consider in more detail. We did not intend to cover that in our proposals today—the hon. Member for Bishop Auckland has raised that matter with me.