December 28, 2024

Laura Tingle to run for ABC board as government prepares shakeup

Laura Tingle #LauraTingle

High-profile ABC journalist Laura Tingle has rebuffed her union-backed colleagues to campaign for a position on the public broadcaster’s board in an attempt to provide staff with a more independent voice.

ABC’s 7:30 chief political correspondent has nominated herself for a staff-elected seat on the board, but has not requested an endorsement from the media union like other candidates. The process coincides with the Albanese government deciding to replace Turnbull board appointee Joseph Gersh from the board once his first term expires.

Journalist and author Laura Tingle will run for the ABC board.Credit:James Brickwood

“The job of the board is to scrutinise decisions management are taking which affect both the corporation as a whole but also, obviously, the staff,” Tingle told this masthead.

“The staff-elected director brings the experience and perspective of staff to that scrutiny. It’s about a lot more than pay and conditions. The recent cuts to ABC archives is a classic case in point which has profound implications for the way we do our job, and for the ABC’s obligations to preserve our national memory.”

The staff-elected board role, currently held by radio producer Jane Connors, is typically backed by the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance. Tingle, who was previously The Australian Financial Review’s political editor and is a union member, said she felt she could not be independent if she was backed by the union.

“There are clear obligations for directors of any board to be independent and while I would obviously listen to all staff concerns, I feel it would be detrimental to simply be perceived as representing the interests of one sector of our workforce,” Tingle said in a note to 7:30 staff last week. Voting for who will represent staff on the board is on February 10.

However, her decision has upset some union members.

The union ballot for staff-elected board candidates includes business reporters Dan Ziffer and Peter Ryan, Four Corners reporters Paul Farrell and Stephen Long and ABC news presenter Dan Bourchier. All except Bourchier have committed to endorsing whoever wins the union-backed election. The ABC’s other major union, the Community and Public Sector Union, is not expected to put up a candidate.

The staff-elected process coincides with a decision by Communications Minister Michelle Rowland to replace Gersh, the executive chairman of Gersh Investment Partners and director of the Sydney Institute, who was appointed to the board by the Turnbull government in 2018. His term expires in May. Gersh was approached for comment.

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