Kerry Ann-Mendoza of the CanaryDefies the NUJ to Give the Claudia Jones Memorial Lecture 2018
Kerry and Tony G! |
Last Tuesday I attended the Claudia Jones Memorial Lecture at the Sands Film Studios in Rotherhithe, London. This was the 11th annual lecture and the most controversial. Claudia Jones, who died at the early age of 49, was a Black journalist, communist and activist who was deported in December 1955 from the United States as part of the McCarthyite witch-hunt, having been gaoled four times for ‘UnAmerican activities’.
Claudia Jones |
The audience at the Sands Film Studios to hear Kerry Ann Mendoza |
Claudia was one of the founders of the Notting Hill Carnival and when she died she was buried to the left of Karl Marx in Highgate Cemetery.
The lecture was due to have been given at the Guardian/Observer offices on October 11th by Kerry Ann-Mendoza, editor of the Canary, but a campaignby White journalists, led by Islamaphobe-in-chief Nick Cohen, led to the National Union of Journalists and its General Secretary Michelle Stanistreet overriding the decision of their own Black members group and cancelling it. Surprisingly both Gary Younge and Aditya Chakrbarti signed the Guardian petition which was circulated, no doubt under peer pressure to back up their White colleagues.
Hadley Freeman and the Guardian's empty headed Marina Hyde celebrate the cancellation of the Claudia Jones Memorial Lecture |
The reasons or pretext given for the cancellation was that Canary had endangered the safety of a Guardian journalist Carl David Goette-Luciak who was deported from Nicaragua earlier this year after having become embedded with and an ardent supporter of the right-wing American backed opposition to the Sandanistas.
Lies from di Stefano |
Buzzfeed retracted the allegation of di Stefano that Max Blumenthall had 'doxxed' the Guardian's journalist - however di Stefano pretended to be unaware of this |
di Stefano boasts about the consequences of the lies that Buzzfeed had to disown, courtesy of the NUJ's political cowardice |
The Blue Plaque erected in honour of Claudia Jones |
I will blog at a later date in more depth on the Guardian’s role in all of this and in particular its support for the right-wing opposition in Nicaragua. It is of a piece with it running with the neo-liberal theme tune called ‘anti-Semitism’ in Corbyn’s Labour Party.
Chris Williamson MP extends his solidarity to a Black journalist under attack |
It was a great lecture by Kerry and I learnt a lot about someone whom I had barely heard of before. It was an honour and a pleasure to meet and chat with Kerry, who is a highly articulate and media savvy Black journalist in the pub afterwards. Canary which Kerry edits is an important part of the alternative media in this country and I wish them success. However let Kerry Ann explainthe affair in her own words:
“I was meant to give the Claudia Jones Memorial Lecture this evening. But instead, a group of privileged columnists at the Guardianand other establishment outlets bottled it. They circled the wagons to ensure that a Black woman didn’t get a platform to speak about another Black woman. But it could not have backfired more spectacularly. Because now, they’ve accidentally created a much bigger platform for the speech they were too afraid to hear.
Remembering Claudia Jones
Early this year, the Black Members Council of the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) invited me to give the annual Claudia Jones Memorial Lecture. I was thrilled. Claudia Jones was a radical; Black, feminist, communist, and a journalist. She helped launch the Notting Hill Carnival and founded the West Indian Gazette. To the establishment of 1950s England, everything about her was wrong. Her colour, her gender, her politics.
Faced with this closed network of privilege, Claudia built her own platform. And she used it to tell the storiesand present the views which Britain’s establishment press would not. Not a million miles from the work that independent outlets like The Canary, the Ferret, Media Diversified and others do today.
But before the lecture could take place, an email went out to Guardian/Observerjournalists. The event was being hosted in their building, and when they discovered the Black Members Council’s choice of speaker, they went ballistic. BuzzFeed‘s Mark Di Stefano published a leaked email about the reaction:
Excuses, excuses
First, the (mostly) white Guardian columnists and their friends threw a public tantrum. Columnists from across the establishment media took to Twitter with a communal shriek of outrage. How dare this women be allowed to lecture *us*? They recycled the normal accusations:
This was what the cancellation of Kerry Ann Mendoza's lecture was really about - the call to Boycott the Guardian |
1. They don’t pay their journalists! As everyone knows (because we publish it on our website), we actively encourage all of our writers to join and be active in the NUJ. Our team also voted on its own pay deal. The absurd argument that we pay per click only works in the sense that every journalist is paid per click/paper sold, because that’s how every publisher makes their money. Our writers get a flat fee per article based on subscription fees, and a top-up from advertising revenue. As an organisation that started without any outside investment, we have had to earn every penny we pay out to ourselves. Whether we have a great month or an awful month, we share what we earn fairly. This is a very different story to the establishment media, an industry whose bosses routinely bustunions and employ unpaid interns to do the bulk of their work.
2. They employ an antisemite! We don’t. Canary writer Steve Topple publicly recanted his antisemitic views more than a year before working for us. He didn’t delete his tweets or try to pretend it didn’t happen. He owned it. And he continues to do so. The whole point of the antiracism movement is to end up with fewer racists. Steve is a success story, and I’m proud of him for changing.
3. They are fake news! This is my personal favourite. The Canary has grown to a team of over 30 journalists and editors, publishing more than 8,000 articles in the past three years. We volunteered to be regulatedindependently, unlike the establishment outlets who self-regulate. When we were found to have publishedan inaccurate story (the sole claim upheld against us since becoming regulated), we made the correction on our front page:
This is routine for us. Whenever we make a significant update or correction to a story, we announce it across all our social media channels with greater prominence than the original. This doesn’t happen in the establishment media.
Unfortunately for the Westminster commentators, people got this. Many have supported us from the start; they’ve followed the growth of The Canary over the last three years and know it’s a very different beast today. We are independently regulated, we have an editorial team of six, a five-stage editorial process, and our articles are written and edited by press-carded, unionised journalists. We are a professional outlet that reachedmore people online in the run-up to the 2017 general election than Reuters, New Statesman, the Economist, the Spectator, the Times and other wealthy, long-established outlets.
Plan BNext, they tried to force me to step down. They targeted me on social media, like a little gang.
The lecture was no longer about Claudia Jones or the Black Members Council that founded the lecture in her name. Now, it was the Guardian‘s event. This is what tokenism looks like. Wealthy liberals hijacking the history of radical leftists while demonising radical, left voices in their own time.
They held a vote to reject me as speaker. Unfortunately for them, NUJ officers pointed out this wasn’t within their jurisdiction. The NUJ Black Members Council chooses the speaker for the Claudia Jones Memorial Lecture, not Guardianwriters. Faced with the lone option to reject the event altogether, they voted in favour of hosting the event.
Carl David Goette-Luciak, the Guardian's man in Nicaragua who his colleague and friend admitted was doing the work of the CIA |
When that didn’t work, they threw up a bunch of bogus headlines that I was ‘breaking the Guardian boycott’.
But we knew from reactions in the meeting that it wouldn’t stop there. And it didn’t.
Next, they concocted a fresh smear in order to put pressure on the NUJ to pull the event.
A straight smear
Suddenly, The Canary was apparently responsible for ‘endangering a journalist’. Criticism centred on a report by award-winning journalist Max Blumenthal which pointed to a number of issues with reporting by the Guardian‘s Carl David Goette-Luciak in Nicaragua. Interestingly, this charge was led once more by Mark Di Stefano of BuzzFeed. His story connected our one article on Goette-Luciak with an online doxxing of him. No evidence of the link was made, and there was no effort to challenge the factual basis of Blumenthal’s report. It was a straight smear. One thing reported on top of the other as if the link was obvious.
More fake headlines - the Boycott of the Guardian doesn't extend to contact with their journalists or their offices! Desperate times for Nick Cohen's mob |
By 7am the next morning, BuzzFeed was forced to retract the accusation. But it didn’t have the integrity to pull the story or post a prominent correction. Instead, it added this ‘update’ at the bottom.
It considers it an ‘update’ to say ‘although we spend this entire article insinuating a link between these two things, there is actually no link between the two things’. Whatever that is, it’s not journalism.
Witch hunt
NUJ general secretary Michelle Stanistreet then pulled the lecture from the Guardian building. Di Stefano tweeted a quote from her which indirectly condemned us for the false allegations BuzzFeed had already retracted.
Di Stefano then announced the cancellation on Twitter, before any of us had been informed.
He failed to mention, however, that his own site had been forced to row back on the smear that triggered the cancellation.
But the story had served its purpose. It created a face-saving ‘out’ for the NUJ and the Guardian. They needed to be able to say ‘we aren’t no-platforming one of the handful of BAME editors-in-chief in UK media – we’re defending journalism!’
The irony here is that these columnists are guilty of their own charge. They began a campaign of harassment against a fellow journalist. They knowingly promoted the smear which had already been rowed back on by the outlet that had made it. And they did so in a cynical attempt to no-platform a Black woman journalist. It also fills me with a peculiar kind of horror that this was enabled by the general secretary of my own union.
So what now?
On Friday 12 October, the NUJ is meetingto discuss the allegations against The Canary; allegations which have already been publicly retracted by the outlet that made them. Stanistreet has overruled the will of the Black Members Council. And she did so on the word of BuzzFeed; an organisation that worked hard to ensure its own workers remain un-unionised.
And so my lecture will happen at another location, on a different day, and it will be streamed around the world. Instead of a small tribute to Claudia Jones, it will be a rallying cry for everyone who is tired of the morally bankrupt establishment media.
For the columnist class, this was never about Claudia Jones, or me, or The Canary. It was about a handful of obscenely privileged Westminster columnists ganging up to avoid being embarrassed. They didn’t want to have to sit and grimace while their industry was criticised from the outside. And they resorted to lies, smears and confected outrage to avoid it.
But they still lost.
They placed themselves on the wrong side of history and exposed their paternalistic, classist, racist attitudes to the world. So I’d like to thank each of them for screwing this up so badly. Because this speech is made all the more important and poignant by the attempts to shut it down.
How many privileged columnists does it take to silence one Black woman? Trick question. They never have, and they never will.
Featured image via Bristol Post, Wikimedia Commons and Pixabay