Ruling

03653-24 Johnston v harwichandmanningtreestandard.co.uk

  • Complaint Summary

    Malcolm Johnston complained to the Independent Press Standards Organisation that harwichandmanningtreestandard.co.uk breached Clause 1 (Accuracy) of the Editors’ Code of Practice in an article headlined “Here's how many people living in Tendring identify as English”, published on 24 April 2024.

    • Published date

      28th November 2024

    • Outcome

      No breach - after investigation

    • Code provisions

      1 Accuracy

Summary of Complaint

1. Malcolm Johnston complained to the Independent Press Standards Organisation that harwichandmanningtreestandard.co.uk breached Clause 1 (Accuracy) of the Editors’ Code of Practice in an article headlined “Here's how many people living in Tendring identify as English”, published on 24 April 2024. 

2. The article reported on the results of a survey, which it referred to as “a survey from the Office for National Statistics, which covers all of [2023]”. It said, “the number of people who identify as English in Tendring has been revealed as higher than the national average.” It said in 2023, “50 per cent of residents in the district consider[ed] themselves English”. It said, “60 per cent of Tendring residents, meanwhile, identify as British which is above the national average of 57 per cent.” The article also reporter respondents to the survey could, “select as many options as they liked, from British, English, Scottish, Welsh, Irish or ‘other’”. It added, “the survey also revealed just 43 per cent of people in England identify as English.” It also stated “a decade earlier, 77 per cent of people identified as English, while it was 84 per cent in 2004. Nationally, the number of people identifying as English has broadly fallen over the last decade.”

3. The article included quote from the director of the British Future think tank, which works to promote diversity and social inclusion, which read:

People’s sense of Englishness ebbs and flows. You'll see a lot of England flags in June when the Three Lions are competing in the Euros, and then they'll disappear again. We could do a lot more to celebrate English identity outside of major sporting moments, in an inclusive way.

4. The complainant said that the article was inaccurate in breach of Clause 1 because he disputed the data was from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), but rather was from a service called Nomis. He considered reporting the data was from ONS was misleading as readers may believe it was from the census and Nomis data was too technical for untrained readers to navigate.

5. The complainant disputed the accuracy of figures in the article. He provided a dataset from the ONS – ONS ANPS – which he said contradicted the data in the article.

6. The complainant also said the article had misleadingly omitted context about the statistics. He said at no point was it explained why the number of those who “identify as” English was falling. He said the article omitted to mention the number of people who identified as British nor did it explain that many of those who “identify as” or “consider themselves” English may also identify as British. He said this amounted to a scaremongering – a racist “dog-whistle”, which gave credence to extreme far-right race theories.

7. The complainant also disputed that respondents to the survey were able to select multiple identities. He said they were only able to select one.

8. The complainant said he considered the quote from the director of British Future think tank to be misleading as he did not believe that the director was commenting on the statistics, but that his words were lifted from somewhere else to support the article. The complainant noted the same quote had been used in an article published two years previously. He thought the director would not agree with the tenor of the article under complaint.

9. The complainant said he believed there was an error in the data the article was based on because in similar national data the numbers of people identifying as British and English, in nowhere else other than Tendring did the combined totals of ‘British’ and ‘English’ exceed 100%.

10. The publication did not accept a breach of Clause 1. It disputed it was inaccurate to state the data was from ONS. It said the article was based on the 2023 ONS Annual Population Survey and was available on Nomis and supplied the dataset which the information in the article was based on.

11. The publication did not accept the information omitted from the article rendered it inaccurate. It said the data showed a fall in respondents identifying as English, and it had accurately reported this data. It said the article was published to coincide with St George’s Day as the patron saint of England and was therefore specifically focused on English identity.

12. The publication did not accept it was inaccurate to report respondents could select multiple identifies. It provided copy of the survey the article was based on to support this assertion, which asked “how would you describe your national identity? Please choose all that apply”.

13. The publication did not accept that the inclusion of the quote from the director of the British Future think tank was inaccurate. It provided emails which showed the newspaper had the institution for comment on the article prior to publication and provided them with the dataset the article was based on.

14. The publication did not accept there was an error regarding the number of people who identified as English in Tendering. It said the data it reported was slightly different to the base data because it considered the base data to contain a rounding error. It said it had made a calculation based on the raw figures from the data set which showed the figure should be rounded to rounded to 60% as a whole integer.

15. Once provided with the dataset, and consulting separately with the ONS, the complainant accepted that the figures in the article were technically accurate. However, he maintained the presentation of the information, including the omission of context he considered to be important, was misleading. The complainant also accepted respondents were able to select multiple identities.

Relevant Clause Provisions

Clause 1 (Accuracy)

i) The Press must take care not to publish inaccurate, misleading or distorted information or images, including headlines not supported by the text.

ii) A significant inaccuracy, misleading statement or distortion must be corrected, promptly and with due prominence, and — where appropriate — an apology published. In cases involving IPSO, due prominence should be as required by the regulator.

iii) A fair opportunity to reply to significant inaccuracies should be given, when reasonably called for.

iv) The Press, while free to editorialise and campaign, must distinguish clearly between comment, conjecture and fact.

Findings of the Committee

16. By the end of the investigation, it was not in dispute between the two parties that the figures published were accurate. The complainant’s concern was rather about the presentation of the information – that it could scaremonger readers regarding declining English identity. Clause 1 requires publications take care not to publish inaccurate or misleading information, and to correct significantly inaccurate, misleading or distorted information; it does not relate to other concerns about the presentation of material, such as that it is scaremongering, where there are no specific claims of inaccuracy.

17. The Committee considered whether it was inaccurate to refer to the data as being from ONS. Where Nomis was a service provided by ONS, the Committee did not consider it inaccurate to state the data in the article was from ONS.

18. Where it was not in dispute respondents were able to select multiple identities, there was no inaccuracy on this point.

19. The Committee then considered whether the inclusion of the quote from the British Future think tank represented an inaccuracy. The publication was able to demonstrate it had approached the institution which was quoted with the data used in the article; there was nothing to suggest it was misled as to the content of the article. There were no inaccuracies identified on this point.

20. The complainant said the article was inaccurate because it omitted to include: the number of people who identify as British; to explain that many of those who identify as English also identify as British as well; or state there was a fall in those identifying as English without context. Newspapers have the right to choose which pieces of information they publish, as long as this does not lead to a breach of the Code. In this case, omitting information about the numbers of people with different identities did not make the article inaccurate or misleading, where it made clear that it was focused specifically on the rise and fall of people identifying as “English” specifically, and made clear that respondents were able to select multiple options. There was no breach on this point.

21. Regarding the figure of 60% of people in Tendring identifying as English, the complainant did not dispute the publication had reported the ONS data correctly, but rather that the ONS data itself was incorrect. The Committee noted the complainant’s position was based on speculation and he did not provide specific evidence to suggest the data was incorrect. Regardless, where the publication had clearly attributed the data to the ONS, and reported the data correctly, there was no inaccuracy identified on this point and no breach of the Code.

Conclusions

22. The complaint was not upheld.

Remedial action required

23. N/A


Date complaint received: 16/05/2024

Date complaint concluded by IPSO: 11/11/2024