Fool of remorse: Veteran TV anchor retracts Duma insult after ban threat

Published time: January 28, 2013 10:43
Edited time: January 28, 2013 14:43
TV host Vladimir Pozner (RIA Novosti / Vladimir Astapkovich)

Television guru Vladimir Pozner has apologized for calling the lower house a “state fool” after MPs threatened to draft a bill that would ban people with foreign citizenship from working for Russian federal TV channels.

The veteran journalist and former president of the Russian Television Academy officially apologized in the Sunday broadcast of his show on Channel One television, about one month he called the State Duma a “state fool” – the expressions sound similar in Russian.

The anchor said that what the parliament considered a deliberate insult was a slip of the tongue and he had already said sorry for it, but was ready to apologize again. However, Pozner emphasized that he was only referring to this one error.

In reply to Pozner’s initial statement, four Russian MPs (representing the United Russia party, Liberal Democrats, Communists and a group of independent MPs who previously associated with the Fair Russia party) told the press that they intended to draft a bill that would forbid those who hold foreign citizenship to work on the state television channels.

They also promised to name the bill after Pozner. In addition, the parliamentary anti-corruption committee officially requested that Channel One report on the salary paid to the anchorman.

Vladimir Pozner is the son of a Russian immigrant and a French mother. He holds citizenships of Russia, France and the United States. He gained notoriety after hosting TV bridges with the United States together with Phil Donahue, and eventually headed the Russian Television Academy – the major NGO acting in the interests of TV producers and broadcasters and also handing out the most prestigious awards.

In 2008, Pozner retired from the post of Academy president, but his influence in the industry is still great.

The proposed ban caused wide resonance in the community, even though the parliamentarians have not produced even a project of the draft within a month since the start of the scandal.

Pozner’s retraction apparently satisfied the authors of the initiative. One of the proponents of the foreigner ban, MP Mikhail Starshinov, told Interfax that the State Duma was ready to accept the contrition, but added that the Pozner Bill had been prepared and would be put on hold in case of possible incidents in the future.

“We understand that the apologies by the anchorman were a forced step caused by persistent and strong measures taken by the State Duma,” Starshinov noted.

Vedomosti daily quoted a source in the presidential administration as saying that the officials in the Kremlin did not like the idea of the Pozner Bill as it was dangerously close to introducing censorship in the mass media. However, the authorities wanted to remind reporters about their responsibility for public statements and therefore supported the bill’s authors.

The source also said that to his awareness all MPs were satisfied with the compromise and will now cease to work on this issue.

President Vladimir Putin’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov said in a press comment that the Kremlin considered the insults to the legislative branch power unacceptable, but also did not find it justifiable to affect the process of hiring anchors on television.

Comments (34)

TO:Norman Hill (unregistered) 30.01.2013 07:02

I am also against any law banning foreign journalists working in Russia. However, we must stress few little facts: almost no Russian citizen work in Western state funded or the corporate media; second, no nation would appreciate or accept foreign citizens working in state funded media outlets- to attack the country; its culture and political and social institutions; finally, I would miss very few of RT foreign journalists if today RT fires them all.

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Norman Hill (unregistered) 29.01.2013 22:37

      Simply put: If the DUMA bans non-Russians from government tv channels, who will be left working at RT? Many of the major on-air staff at RT are British or American! Ofcourse, that may improve RT.

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PR1oh1 29.01.2013 14:45

Media used against Russia (unregistered) wrote in #9
@PR1oh1. A balanced and truthful approach to the reporting of issues is legitimate and constitutes professional journalism.  Attempts to misrepresent situations (disinformation), engage in misleading and/or hostile narratives constitutes propaganda (spin).   Propaganda against Russia is clearly a hostile action.

If the U.S. government believes that RT is engaged in hostile propaganda, it has the right to terminate its operating licence.  This may be a desirable outcome in any event as the revival of the Cold War by the U.S. can at any stage in the future become a ‘hot’ one, especially recognising the ongoing military encirclement of Russia and China with missile architecture, the expansion/build-up of NATO (and associated military alliances) and leaked documents which show their preparations for war with Russia and China.  With the successive and globally expanding wars of the U.S./ NATO/ Israel/ Partnership member alliance (being the latest military powers to have embraced militarism), it is unfortunate that many do not recognise what is occurring but it is likely that all eventually will.  

By the way, your name betrays your intentions.  PR 1(0)1 - Public relations 101.  Public relations (PR) is the practice of ‘managing’ the flow of information (ie employing spin).  PR involves the manipulation of information, not the pursuit of truth.  By your choice of identifying yourself as a ‘PR’ individual, you have established that you have little credibility.

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My screen name, the PR represents Papa Rodina, not public relations. So, again, you make up what you wish to believe. And, you have no confidence in Russian society making the correct decisions in their best interest. That is why you wish to limit their choices and to silence opposing views.

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