Chris Oliver-Taylor tells unlawful termination hearing of events leading up to decision to sack journalist three days into casual contractAntoinette Lattouf v ABC hearing day five – live updatesSign up for Guardian Australia’s free weekly media newsletter hereThe ABC executive who sacked Antoinette Lattouf for sharing a Human Rights Watch post has conceded he felt “pressure from above” after the then ABC chair, Ita Buttrose, sent him all the complaints she was receiving.Under cross-examination in the federal court, which is hearing Lattouf’s unlawful termination claim, the outgoing ABC content chief, Chris Oliver-Taylor, said there was a “strong view” from colleagues about “having someone who has published strong views, either way, on air”.Sign up to get Guardian Australia’s weekly media diary as a free newsletter Continue reading…Chris Oliver-Taylor tells unlawful termination hearing of events leading up to decision to sack journalist three days into casual contractAntoinette Lattouf v ABC hearing day five – live updatesSign up for Guardian Australia’s free weekly media newsletter hereThe ABC executive who sacked Antoinette Lattouf for sharing a Human Rights Watch post has conceded he felt “pressure from above” after the then ABC chair, Ita Buttrose, sent him all the complaints she was receiving.Under cross-examination in the federal court, which is hearing Lattouf’s unlawful termination claim, the outgoing ABC content chief, Chris Oliver-Taylor, said there was a “strong view” from colleagues about “having someone who has published strong views, either way, on air”.Sign up to get Guardian Australia’s weekly media diary as a free newsletter Continue reading…
The ABC executive who sacked Antoinette Lattouf for sharing a Human Rights Watch post has conceded he felt “pressure from above” after the then ABC chair, Ita Buttrose, sent him all the complaints she was receiving.
Under cross-examination in the federal court, which is hearing Lattouf’s unlawful termination claim, the outgoing ABC content chief, Chris Oliver-Taylor, said there was a “strong view” from colleagues about “having someone who has published strong views, either way, on air”.
Lattouf was hired as a casual host on ABC Radio Sydney’s Mornings program for one week in December 2023. She was taken off air three days into a five-day contract after she posted on social media about the Israel-Gaza war.
“The pressure was now building, the concerns were rising,” Oliver-Taylor said of the situation on 19 December 2023, after Buttrose wrote to him directly and said she would be forwarding on all complaints she received about Lattouf.
“We were trying to build a scaffold around Ms Lattouf, to protect her and the show … at that moment in time that was holding, but the position was becoming harder and harder, I felt,” he said.
Lattouf’s lead barrister, Oshie Fagir, said Oliver-Taylor had been put in “a really unfair position … by your bosses”, to which Oliver-Taylor replied: “I don’t think that’s entirely true.”
“I think that due diligence should have been taken with regard to Ms Lattouf and Ms Lattouf would have made an excellent presenter for the ABC in other times,” Oliver-Taylor said. “But the published views meant that it was a very difficult decision that my colleagues had made. So there was pressure there, and I feel due diligence was not done as it should have been. There was pressure from above, I accept that.”
News Corp and ‘perfectly accurate’ information
During a gruelling six-hour day of giving evidence, Oliver-Taylor was asked how “perfectly accurate” information about Lattouf’s dismissal was published by News Corp “before she even got home”.
Oliver-Taylor said he had no idea, telling the court he had accepted a call from The Australian’s Sophie Elsworth but he had declined to comment. He said he did not mention the call in his affidavit because he didn’t think it was relevant.
Questioned by Fagir, Oliver-Taylor agreed that his “goal was to get Ms Lattouf off air in time to beat the story” so that it did not look like he was “bowing to the pressure of The Australian”, he said. “That would be very unfair.”
Fagir said some of the information reported – including that Lattouf was hired by Steve Ahern, the former manager of ABC Radio Sydney – was known to a very small number of people.
A screenshot and the crisis meeting
Oliver-Taylor was also asked when he first saw the Instagram post that triggered the presenter’s removal.
He said he saw a screenshot earlier that day when it was shared during an online crisis meeting by the head of audio, Ben Latimer, who had discovered the post and told him about it at 11.30am.
Oliver-Taylor explained he does not have any social media accounts, and he relied on his colleagues to judge whether Lattouf’s posts were acceptable or not before deciding she had breached editorial impartiality and failed to follow a direction.
He was unclear, however, who had given Lattouf that direction, which the ABC says was not to post on social media, saying he believed it was Ahern.
This conflicts with earlier evidence from the managing director, David Anderson, and Lattouf that it was Lattouf’s line manager, Elizabeth Green, who had spoken to the presenter on the Tuesday afternoon. The contents of that conversation are disputed by Lattouf, who says she was not told not to post at all.
“Who gave Ms Lattouf the direction, to your understanding?” Fagir asked.
“I believe it was Ahern,” Oliver-Taylor said.
Oliver-Taylor said he “confused” the ABC’s social media, editorial and impartiality policies in some text messages shown to the court.
Oliver-Taylor texted Anderson about his decision at 12.30pm, according to published documents.
‘Absolutely in damage control’
It was a dramatic reversal of the ABC’s strategy, because at 11am Anderson had assured Buttrose in an email that he was “absolutely in damage control” and a decision had been taken to keep Lattouf on air.
“We have weighed up the consequences of prematurely pulling Antoinette Lattouf off air, versus managing this until Friday as per her contract,” Anderson wrote. “We have concluded that the best possible outcome from here is to manage this such that Ms Lattouf does not editorial engage in the Middle East conflict while on air for the remainder of her contract.”
Anderson was out for a Christmas lunch with Buttrose when the decision was taken to remove Lattouf.
Asked why Lattouf had been removed, Oliver-Taylor told the court: “Ms Lattouf was removed from air for breaching a direction, as well as after publishing a number of, say, tweets, articles, posts, that continued the view that Ms Lattouf was not impartial whilst hosting a live radio show”.
The witness also said he was unclear who had complained to the ABC about Lattouf being hired but he relied on information from Anderson who had texted him about her social media feed being full of “antisemitic hate”.
“I don’t believe I knew this was a lobby by pro-Israel supporters, well, by people who held a different view to Ms Lattouf,” he said.
The hearing continues on Tuesday 11 February with five remaining witnesses including Buttrose.
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