Information provided by news publishers is essential to our democracy. And now more than ever it's important to remind our political leaders of the critical role we play in society.
In the upcoming midterm elections, much is at stake. News consumption skyrockets, yet newspapers have experienced years of revenue decline. We need leaders in Congress who will aid us in not only supporting our editorial independence but our financial independence. We cannot continue to be the voice of the people if we can no longer invest in delivering high-quality news.
Today, in an effort to secure that independence, we call on our senators and representatives to support the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act of 2018, which would help create an antitrust safe harbor for the news-publishing industry to be able to collectively negotiate with the tech platforms. The bill would provide a time-limited period in which news publishers who produce original content and hire reporters can negotiate collectively and withhold content.
For the better part of a century, news publishers have relied on advertising revenue to financially support in-depth investigative reporting and high-quality local coverage. But while Google and Facebook have allowed information to spread faster and further than ever before, they've also stepped in between publishers and readers and broken apart the basic economics of the news industry. Not only do those two companies attract the vast majority of all digital advertising revenue, they also actively and purposefully manage what kinds of news people are exposed to and when.
An antitrust safe harbor such as that proposed in the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act would provide a four-year window for newspaper companies to negotiate fair terms with the platforms that would flow earned subscription and advertising dollars generated from their content back to the publishers - while protecting and preserving Americans' right to access quality news.
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Parameters included in the bill ensure that these negotiations would strictly benefit Americans and news publishers at large, not just one or a few publishers. It is a pro-market, limited-government solution to a critical problem.
We are not the only ones being harmed by the duopoly. Our readers have the right to demand a more-diversified, vibrant digital landscape and continued access to quality journalism. Now is the time for our representatives to join us and show that they, too, care about the future of the digital landscape - and the future of news.
David Chavern is president and CEO of the Arlington, Va.-based News Media Alliance, a newspaper trade group.