FCC's Baker Says Government Should Stay Out of Journalism
In a speech to The Media Institute in Washington on the future of journalism, FCC Commissioner Meredith Attwell Baker conceded that like many other industries, journalism is at a crossroads. But she said she disagreed that government needed to step in to fund the business.
"I oppose the proposition that at the first sign of a challenge the government should step in and fix it," she said. "Our nation has flourished for over 200 years with a strong independent press as a check on government abuse. This tradition should not be discarded so easily." She said tomorrow's journalist won't be a "a man with a fedora and a typewriter," but that the core attributes should remain" objective, fact-based reporting that uncovers the truth about power and powerful interests, private and public. Among those core values are independence from government, she suggests.
FCC's Baker Says Government Should Stay Out of Journalism Hands Off the Journalist (Commissioner Baker)