Categories: News

ABC board sacks managing director Michelle Guthrie

The ABC Board has sacked managing director Michelle Guthrie, declaring in a blunt statement that it was “not in the best interests” of the organisation for her to continue to lead it.

ABC chairman Justin Milne said the board “believed that new leadership would benefit the organisation, its dedicated employees, and the ABC audience”.

The statement said the decision followed several months of discussion.

Guthrie said she was “devastated” by the board’s decision to dismiss her “despite no claim of wrongdoing on my part”. She was considering her legal options.

Guthrie, who was only about halfway through her contract, has been under fire from critics outside the organisation and within it.

News Corp has been unrelenting in its attacks on the ABC, accusing it of political bias and pushing back at the competition it presents to commercial operators.

Guthrie has also been criticised for not standing up for the organisation sufficiently, and for her lack of journalistic experience.

The Australian on Monday reported a split between Milne – who was appointed by the Turnbull government – and Guthrie over the future of the organisation. It cited differences over key projects and how to deal with a hostile Coalition government.

Milne said: “In resolving to seek fresh leadership, the Board’s foremost consideration was the long-term interests of our own people and the millions of Australians who engage with ABC content every week”.

David Anderson will be acting managing director while a search is conducted, internally and externally, for a replacement for Guthrie. He is currently Director, Entertainment & Specialist, responsible for broadcast television networks and associated services, radio music networks, podcasts and specialist radio content

The MD is selected by the board, independently of the government.

“We understand that transitions can be disruptive in the short-term. However, the ABC is fortunate to have an experienced and capable executive team that will provide continuity in the months ahead,” Milne said.

“The board wishes to thank Michelle for her contribution to the ABC. We are very grateful for all her hard work,” he said.

In a very brief statement, Communications Minister Mitch Fifield – who has been a constant fault-finder of the ABC’s political coverage – said “The government thanks Michelle Guthrie and acknowledges her service as managing director of the ABC for the past two and a half years in what is a challenging and rapidly changing media environment.”

Earlier in her career, Guthrie worked for News Corporation and for Google.

Liberal senator Eric Abetz, who repeatedly has attacked the ABC, demanded an explanation of Guthrie’s sacking.

“The dismissal of the Managing Director, seemingly without notice, requires a full and detailed explanation from the ABC Board,” Abetz said.

“I am hopeful that the new managing director will ensure that that the Ultimo-centric broadcaster is more in line with the aspirations of Australians including by delivering benefit to the taxpayer, stopping the left-wing bias and bringing an end to the frolics masquerading as news and ‘comedy’ from some ABC employees,” Abetz said.

Milne, in a interview with the ABC, would not be drawn on the detail of why Guthrie was dismissed.

“We feel that we need different leadership to take us through what are very obviously very challenging times,” he said. The board had made the decision and “the details, the ins and outs of that decision I am not sharing with you”.

“The board felt in the end that her leadership style was not the style that we needed going forward”.

Milne denied the government had had any influence on the decision.

Asked about Guthrie’s relationship with the government – which has cut the organisation’s funding – Milne said: “That is possibly an area that could have been better, I think that is fair to say”. He said he would like to see the relationship with government improve – stressing he was talking about “government”, not “the Liberal party or the Labor party”.

In a statement, Guthrie said that when she joined the ABC in 2016, “I knew I had an enormous challenge in front of me to break down some of the internal barriers to progress.”

She had “invested more in investigative journalism; more in regional journalism; more in innovative content; and increased the efficiency and effectiveness of work across the ABC”.

As the first female managing director, “I felt a tremendous responsibility and unique privilege to lead Australia’s most important cultural institution. At all times I have promoted the ABC’s importance to the community, including having to defend and protect the ABC’s independence”.

She pointed out that the ABC Act fixed the managing director’s term at five years.

“My term concludes on 4 July 2021. While my contract permits the board to terminate my appointment without cause and with immediate effect, I believe there is no justification for the board to trigger that termination clause. I am considering my legal options,” she said.

“I wanted to continue the transformation of the ABC and to support the great work of ABC’s dedicated and passionate employees to ensure our continuing trust, quality and distinctiveness as the source of Australian culture, conversations and stories.

“To me, it is the content produced by the ABC that is of primary importance to Australians, with the technology used to deliver that content a distant second,” she said.

“At no point have any issues been raised with me about the transformation being undertaken, the investing in audiences strategy and my effectiveness in delivering against that strategy.”

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By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

TOP IMAGE: Michelle Guthrie. (AAP/Julian Smith/The Conversation)

Michelle Grattan

Michelle Grattan is a professorial fellow at the University of Canberra and chief political correspondent at The Conversation. Wikipedia Page

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