In an outspoken attack on "liberal media commentators" the home
secretary, Charles Clarke, will tonight claim there is a "pernicious
and even dangerous poison" infecting press coverage on the government's
civil liberties record.
In a speech at the London School of Economics, Mr Clarke will accuse some
parts of the press of making incorrect and over-simplified statements about
his government's record.
The speech comes as part of a coordinated government fightback on the
civil liberties agenda, which saw Tony Blair yesterday accuse critics like
the former law lord Lord Steyn of being "out of touch".
Mr Clarke also today published a document on the Home Office website
demolishing "frequently asserted myths" in the press about the
effects of government security and law and order legislation.
"I believe that a pernicious and even dangerous poison is now
slipping into at least some parts of this media view of the world," Mr
Clarke will say in the inaugural Polis lecture at the LSE.
"In the absence of many of the genuinely dangerous and evil
totalitarian dictatorships to fight - since they've gone - the media has
steadily rhetorically transferred to some of the existing democracies,
particularly the United States and the United Kingdom, some of the
characteristics of those dictatorships.
"So some commentators routinely use language like 'police state',
'fascist', 'hijacking our democracy', 'creeping authoritarianism',
'destruction of the rule of law', whilst words like 'holocaust', 'gulag' and
'apartheid' are regularly used descriptively of our society in ways which
must be truly offensive to those who experienced those realities."
He went on: "As these descriptions and language are used, the truth
just flies out of the window as does any adherence to professional
journalistic standards or any requirement to examine the facts and check
them with rigour.
"In the case of often complex debates, for example on the
appropriate balance between liberty and security, much media comment reduces
itself to simplistic and flowery rhetoric."
Mr Clarke highlighted three recent articles in the Observer, the Guardian
and the Independent newspapers that made, he claimed, "incorrect,
tendentious and over-simplified" statements about Labour's record on
civil liberties.
"These pieces are in my opinion symptomatic of a more general
intellectual laziness which seeks to slip on to the shoulders of modern
democratic states the mantle of dictatorial power." The home secretary
also blasted Lord Steyn for suggesting he was trying to "knobble"
the judiciary: "It is offensive and wrong for him to say that. It would
be ridiculous for me to seek to knobble the judiciary."
Earlier Mr Blair told journalists at his monthly press conference in
Downing Street that he would legislate again to give the police more powers
to tackle the threat from terrorism or the nuisance of anti-social behaviour.
The prime minister said the "civil liberties" of a pensioner
living in fear "counted" just as much as a suspected criminal.
In an email exchange with the Observer's Henry Porter, one of the
journalists singled out for criticism by the home secretary, Mr Blair
yesterday promised he would act against drug dealers in particular.
"I would widen the police powers to seize the cash of suspected drug
dealers, the cars they drive round in. I would impose restrictions on those
suspected of being involved in organised crime. In fact I would generally
harry, hassle and hound them until they give up or leave the country,"
he wrote.
Responding to the advance publication of the speech, the shadow home
secretary, David Davis, said: "Charles Clarke should realise that you
don't defend our way of life by sacrificing our way of life. The evidence
shows that in many cases, things that have been enacted in the name of
defending our security have actually done nothing to protect the people, and
have even resulted in consequences entirely contrary to the government's own
intentions.
"It is remarkable that he has chosen to blame the media - especially
as his whole strategy seems designed to achieve good headlines for the
government rather than effective policies to protect the citizens of this
country," Mr Davis said.