EurActiv Logo
Actualités & débats européens
- dans votre langue -
Click here for EU news »
EurActiv.com Réseau

TOUTES LES RUBRIQUES

Le Parlement veut une meilleure communication médiatique sur l'UE

Publié 08 septembre 2010 - Mis à jour 09 septembre 2010
Version imprimableSend by email

Une meilleure communication sur les affaires européennes par les radiodiffuseurs de service public est primordiale si l'on veut combler le fossé entre l'Union européenne et ses citoyens, a affirmé le Parlement européen hier (7 septembre), insistant sur le fort potentiel des médias sociaux à aborder des jeunes.

Low turnout in EU elections highlights "the need to continue efforts to overcome the distance between the EU and its citizens,"MEPs said, adopting a resolution drafted by Danish MEP Morten Løkkegaard.

The report calls on the EU to "foster the establishment of transnational media […], while tightening up the rules intended to safeguard pluralism and combat concentration of media ownership," identifying broadcasting Euronews in all EU languages and making the Parliament's EuroparlTV service "more effective" as ways of achieving this.

While acknowledging the "immense potential" of social media like Facebook and Twitter to reach young people, MEPs warned that "their reliability as sources cannot always sufficiently be guaranteed," that they "cannot be considered to be professional media" and may "give rise to serious breaches of journalistic ethics".

"Caution is required when taking up these new tools," the report declares, stressing "the importance of drawing up a code of ethics applicable to new media".

Controversy over broadcasters' independence…

The resolution was only passed after an alternative version, drawn up by the European People's Party (EPP), Socialists and Democrats (S&D) and liberal (ALDE) groups, was presented in place of the original report approved by the European Parliament's culture committee.

That resolution had demanded that public service broadcasters cover EU matters more widely, and urged governments, parties and politicians to do more to explain them to citizens (EurActiv 25/06/10).

But yesterday's report stressed that while public service broadcasters "have a responsibility to cover the EU" and should set themselves "ambitious targets" in this regard, member states should must always ensure that the broadcasters are independent.

"Public service broadcasters hold the key to informing the European public on EU matters. Of course broadcasters have full independence to carry out the coverage as they see fit: the important thing is that they have EU coverage at all and that they take their responsibility seriously," said rapporteur Løkkegaard following the adoption of the alternative text.

Meanwhile, other controversial proposals adopted at committee level were removed from yesterday's resolution, including plans to introduce a European training programme to produce a "taskforce" of journalists covering EU affairs and a fund to support student media to cover EU matters.

"It would serve nobody's future interests buying up editors and newspapers. There is a spirit in your report that seems to blur the divisions between us and the independence of the media," German MEP Petra Kammerevert (Socialists & Democrats) told Løkkegaard.

"There is nothing wrong with appealing to broadcasters to cover more EU affairs but member state guidelines are the start of a slippery slope," Kammerevert warned.

Other more controversial proposals survived, however: the Parliament advocated "incorporating the EU more fully into all educational curricula" and teaching in schools "courses in journalism using new media".

…amid Conservative opposition

UK Conservative MEP Emma McClarkin had campaigned vociferously against the committee's text, claiming that rather than being a report that looked at how new media was changing journalism around the EU and the challenges and opportunities it provides, as was the intention, it had become a report which is all about how the EU institutions can better sell themselves to the public.

McClarkin said on Monday (6 September) that she would vote against the report, arguing that by focusing on ways to boost media coverage of EU affairs, MEPs had "missed an opportunity to look at encouraging democratic engagement through social media in deference to a vanity exercise".

The report "was initially meant to look at ways new media was changing journalism. However, it became a wish list for improving how MEPs and the EU institutions are reported in the media," complained the European Conservatives and Reformists group in a statement. The adopted report encourages member states to nominate "specialised European affairs officers" responsible for explaining the implications of EU policies on the ground.

New role for Parliament information offices

Meanwhile, "the Parliament's information offices should play an active role in informing the public of its activities and this role should not only be done by EU staff coming from the institutions," Løkkegaard said.

"We have to look at new ways, where we hire experienced media professionals to undertake this role," he added.

Political parties "should give European issues a more prominent position in their programmes and national MPs should become more involved in EU policymaking, the report said.

The falling number of EU-accredited journalists is "extremely worrying," the parliamentarians found, urging the introduction of measures "supporting those currently in Brussels".

Réactions : 

Hailing yesterday's adoption of the report, its author, Danish MEP Morten Løkkegaard (Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe), said "civil servants and politicians within the system should undergo in-service training to give them the skills needed to inform and communicate with the public".

"Social media has proven an excellent way to do this by giving the public a chance to have a look at what goes on behind the walls. And finally this is the easiest way for citizens to talk and debate directly with decision-makers," Løkkegaard said.

Speaking after the draft resolution had been adopted in June, UK Conservative MEP Emma McClarkin said "this report has been hijacked by some MEPs who want to change the rules on how the European Parliament is reported by forcing broadcasters to include more EU content, by funding training courses for journalists in EU affairs and by funding student radio and broadcasters to cover EU matters".

"It is completely unacceptable to use more taxpayers' money to promote the European Union. You can't buy newspaper or broadcast coverage. To do so is dishonest, manipulative and frankly something you would expect from an authoritarian regime," McClarkin added.

Contexte : 

In recent years, the European Commission has launched several initiatives to tackle citizens' growing lack of trust and interest in the EU project. 

Following 2005's 'Plan D' response to the institutional crisis prompted by the 'no' votes against the EU's draft constitution in France and the Netherlands, a White Paper on a European communication policy was launched in 2006. 

Another initiative, 'Debate Europe', was launched in spring 2008 as part of the EU executive's new Internet and audiovisual strategies, which were unveiled ahead of the European Parliament elections in 2009. It is an online discussion forum on which all input is translated into all the EU's official languages. 

The Commission also opened its own channel on YouTube and revamped its central web portal Europa in an attempt to make it more user-friendly (EurActiv 14/07/09EurActiv 21/09/09). 

A lire aussi

More in this section

Publicité

Publicité

Publicité