The News Media Association (NMA), the united voice of the £6 billion national, regional and local news media sector in the UK, launches today (Monday 10 November).
NMA chairman and former Newspaper Society (NS) president Adrian Jeakings (pictured below) said: “Free speech and independent news are the building blocks of a healthy democracy. Newspapers embody this by holding the powerful to account, exposing corruption, and giving a voice to the unheard.
“Newsbrands – national, regional and local newspapers in print and digital – are by far the biggest investors in news in the UK, accounting for more than two-thirds (69 per cent) of the total spend on news provision. The NMA will provide this important sector with a clear voice on the issues which affect it.”
The NMA has been formed by the merger of the NS, the voice of local media, and the Newspaper Publishers’ Association (NPA) which represented national publishers.
The NMA will represent the interests of its member publishers on a range of issues affecting the news media industry from press freedom and public sector competition to routes to market and copyright and IP.
Murdoch MacLennan, Telegraph Media Group chief executive (picturd left) and outgoing NPA chairman, said:“Newspapers have a huge audience of 42 million adults every month in print and online who rely on our publications for trusted news and information.
“I am confident that the industry has a long and vibrant future ahead of it and that the NMA will play a central role in helping the sector develop and prosper in an era in which news is being consumed across more platforms than ever before.”
When the NS was launched in 1836, the trade association represented both local and national newspapers but in 1906 the NPA was formed as a separate organisation to represent the nationals.
Although the two associations have worked closely together over the years, the NMA formally reunites them for the first time in over 100 years.
NMA chief executive David Newell (left) said: “Press freedom is under attack on multiple fronts and defending this fundamental right to free speech will be central to the NMA’s mission. The new organisation will work to clearly articulate the position of the news media industry on this and other important issues which affect the industry.”
More on this story at www.pjnews.co.uk