Senate debates
Tuesday, 25 March 2025
Adjournment
Media Ownership
9:33 pm
Peter Whish-Wilson (Tasmania, Australian Greens) Share this | Hansard source
There has never been a more important time than now for strong public interest journalism. There's never been a more important time than now for journalism to be free of commercial and political interference. Many Australians are aware that there's been a push for years to get a royal commission into the Murdoch press and its influence on our democracy. This idea is already under relentless assault from commercial and political interests.
But, unfortunately, and very concerningly, there's been a new development, a new assault on public interest journalism. I wanted to talk tonight specifically about Australian Digital Holdings, ADH. Last year, in November, the Guardian published an article written by Amanda Meade, 'Fears for local news diversity if rightwing startup buys Southern Cross regional TV network'. It goes on to say:
Fringe news streaming channel ADH TV, which launched with Alan Jones at the helm, confirms offer for 93 regional free-to-air stations—
and talk about concerns, including from Matthew Ricketson, a professor of communication at Deakin University, who said:
We already know that the provision of locally gathered and reported news and current affairs in regional and rural Australia is stretched almost to breaking point …
If what gets added in there now is slanted heavily to one side of politics or another, does that serve rural and regional audiences in being provided with good quality public interest journalism?
It was then reported not long ago, on Friday 28 February, that conservative news operator Australian Digital Holdings had purchased Southern Cross Austereo's television assets. This was in an article by Josh Duggan at the ABC, and he mentions that Nightly News 7 Tasmania has the highest ratings and the most eyeballs. If you read Mr Duggan's article, he talks about concerns from Channel 7 staff, expressed in representations made to him privately, about their editorial independence, given the ultraconservative background of Australian Digital Holdings.
So what is Australian Digital Holdings? Australian Digital Holdings TV launched in December 2021 with Alan Jones at the helm—and some other shady characters. But, most tellingly, it is chaired by Maurice Newman, the co-founder of ADVANCE. Senator Scarr, you get to hear me talk about this again tonight. For those who don't know, ADVANCE is the Liberal aligned and Liberal funded—through the McCormack foundation—astroturfing group that led the campaign against the Indigenous Voice to Parliament and a string of other conservative campaigns. You'd probably have to be living under a rock to not know that they're the group that are going after the Greens. They see the Greens as enemy No. 1 in our democracy and are boasting to be spending up to $15 million to wipe us off the electoral map. Let's just say that they're trying to be significant players in the Australian landscape, and we don't really know much about them except that they are aligned with the Liberal Party directly and are funded by the Liberal Party. We also know they're aligned with the Atlas Network, a conservative think tank out of the US that has over 550 subsidiary organisations, including many here in Australia. Yet, throughout all ADVANCE's toxic campaigning, they've refused to front the media, despite authoring and publishing vast quantities of disinformation.
Not only is Australian Digital Holdings TV chaired by the co-founder of ADVANCE—as I mentioned, Maurice Newman—but, until February 2025, it even listed ADVANCE as one of its official partners on its website. This, clearly, gives rise to concerns that Australian Digital Holdings TV would not only join the likes of Rupert Murdoch's Sky News in operating a deeply conservative news channel—which, of course, it has a right to do—but will operate as ADVANCE's very own media mouthpiece.
To your point there, Senator Scarr, it would be one thing if Australian Digital Holdings TV were to remain a fringe media entity, which it is—as is Sky TV, by the way. However, as I mentioned, on 28 February, they purchased 93 regional free-to-air stations owned by Southern Cross Austereo—including, unfortunately, Nightly News 7 Tasmania, which is the biggest and most popular commercial TV network. These assets also included Network Ten affiliates in Tasmania, Darwin, the Spencer Gulf, Broken Hill, Mount Isa and remote central and eastern Australia and Channel 9 regional affiliates in the Spencer Gulf and Broken Hill.
As I mentioned, staff at Channel 7 in Tasmania are among those already raising concerns about ADVANCE's ultra-right-wing leanings. When asked about ADH TV's listing of ADVANCE as one of their partners on their website, ADH director Jason Morrison blatantly lied, telling journalists the partnership never existed. Yet we have screenshots of the site listing from February—which we were using in our research, coincidentally—which mention ADVANCE and a number of other very interesting official partners. Journalists who have been looking at this can also confirm the listing using Wayback Machine, an online internet archive that fields a digital library of internet sites.
Another question: who is ADH director Jason Morrison? Mr Morrison is a former adviser to mining magnate Gina Rinehart and has been a vocal supporter of Peter Dutton's nuclear plan. In 2014 he even confirmed he was interested in standing for one of the safest state Liberal seats in New South Wales.
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