The results of a recent Free Speech Union survey of councillors nationwide reveal a sorry story for free speech in local
councils. On a scale from 1-10, respondents reported feeling free to counter or challenge council staff publicly, on
average, a paltry 4.3. This is an alarm bell for the state of our democracy, says Jonathan Ayling, Chief Executive of
the Free Speech Union.
“The Free Speech Union continues to be aware of councils with censorial attitudes. Just within the past month we’ve been
notified of four councils failing to uphold free speech. This is an issue we have followed for several years.
“Unelected council staff are supposed to answer to elected representatives, not the other way around. Councillors are
the ones elected by ratepayers; council staff aren’t.
“Additionally, when asked if Codes of Conduct are being weaponised to silence local councillors, over 50% of the 85
respondents said that this happens occasionally, frequently, or constantly. Only 20% said this never happens.
“Codes of conduct are notorious for silencing certain perspectives. Not only do they lead to self-censorship, but
they’re also manipulated and twisted to shut down some speech on the basis that some deem it impermissible.
“If councillors are forced to self-censor and feel unable to challenge their staff, what effect does this then have on
our nation? For our local democracies to flourish, measures need to be taken to encourage deliberation and debate, not
distinguish it.”