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Media Bill: policy background

Commons Briefing paper by John Woodhouse. It was first published on Wednesday, 15 June 2022. It was last updated on Tuesday, 10 October 2023.

A Media Bill was included in the Background Briefing Notes to the Queen’s Speech of 10 May 2022 (PDF). According to the Briefing Notes, the Bill would, among other things: 

  • enable the sale of Channel 4.
  • update the UK's public broadcasting framework for the digital age.
  • enable Ofcom to introduce a video-on-demand code to protect UK audiences from harmful material.

In January 2023, the Government announced that Channel 4 would remain in public ownership. It also said the Media Bill would include measures to help ensure the long-term financial sustainability of the broadcaster.

 

Draft Media Bill (March 2023)

In a Written Ministerial Statement of 29 March 2023, Lucy Frazer, Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, announced the publication of a draft Media Bill (PDF). She said this would deliver on the Government’s vision for the broadcasting sector, as set out in its April 2022 white paper, Up Next. According to the Secretary of State, the Bill would reform broadcasting law to enable the UK’s public service broadcasters to better compete with global companies. She explained that the Bill would: 

  • deliver a new public service remit for TV while making sure public service broadcasters continue to service audiences across the UK with universally available, high-quality programming.
  • make sure public service broadcast content is always carried and easy to find for UK audiences on connected devices and major online platforms, including on Smart TVs, set-top boxes and streaming sticks, so audiences can easily access this content in the way that best suits them.
  • introduce a sustainability duty on the Channel 4 Television Corporation (C4C) and remove the existing publisher-broadcaster restriction on C4C so it has a greater ability to produce and monetise its own content, if it chooses to do so, ensuring Channel 4’s long-term future in public ownership.
  • update the public service remit of S4C (Sianel Pedwar Cymru), the Welsh language television service, to include digital and online services. Removing the current geographical broadcasting restrictions so that S4C can broaden its reach and offer its content on a range of new platforms in the UK and beyond, demonstrating the Government’s commitment to the future of Welsh language broadcasting.
  • bring video-on-demand services like Netflix under UK regulation, ensuring that larger, TV-like services are subject to the same high standards as broadcast TV channels, by giving Ofcom powers to investigate and take action if they consider it appropriate.
  • reduce regulatory burdens and costs on commercial radio stations which are no longer needed due to the decisive shift towards digital listening, while also strengthening protections for the provision of national and local news and local information for listeners.
  • introduce measures to protect the position of radio accessed via smart speakers (for example ‘Alexa’ devices) by ensuring listeners are able to find the content they expect in an unaltered format, without additional or substituted advertisement.
  • repeal Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013 which would (if commenced) force news publishers to pay the costs of any court judgment if they were not a member of the approved regulator, regardless of the outcome of the court judgment.

 

The following supporting material was also published:

  • Explanatory Notes (PDF) giving policy and legal background to the Bill as well as an overview of its provisions. 

 

The Culture, Media and Sport Committee has published two reports on the draft Bill:

  • Draft Media Bill: Radio Measures (PDF)(July 2023). The Committee said the evidence it received indicated that the provisions relating to radio were the most contentious, so it hoped the Government would address the concerns before the Bill was introduced. 

 

This Library Briefing examines the background to the Media Bill, as announced in the May 2022 Queen's Speech.

 

 

Type
Research briefing
Reference
CBP-9571 
Communications Act 2003
Thursday, 17 July 2003
Public acts
Crime and Courts Act 2013
Thursday, 25 April 2013
Public acts
Draft Media Bill
Wednesday, 29 March 2023
Command papers
House of Lords
House of Commons
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