Leveson Inquiry

Completed
Chair Lord Justice Leveson Judge / Judiciary
Established 13 Jul 2011
Final Report 29 Nov 2012
Commissioned by Cabinet Office Commissioned by the Prime Minister; secretariat provided via DCMS

The Leveson Inquiry examined the culture, practices and ethics of the British press following the News International phone hacking scandal. Part 1 made 92 recommendations on press regulation, data protection, police-media relations, and media plurality. Many recommendations were not implemented; the government rejected statutory press regulation in favour of the industry-created IPSO.

Evidence & Impact
The Leveson Inquiry was established in November 2011 following revelations about phone hacking and other press misconduct. Lord Justice Leveson's report, published on 29 November 2012, made 92 recommendations covering press regulation, data protection, police-press relations, and media plurality.

The government's response was mixed. The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted "the principles that Lord Justice Leveson has laid out" for independent self-regulation but rejected statutory underpinning, expressing "serious concerns and misgivings" about crossing "the Rubicon of writing elements of press regulation into the law of the land." Of the 92 recommendations, the government accepted 19 (21%), accepted in principle 58 (63%), and did not accept 15 (16%).

The government's legislative response centred on establishing the Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press (October 2013) and passing the Crime and Courts Act 2013. This created an alternative to Leveson's recommended statutory framework. The Press Recognition Panel was established under the Charter, though no major news publisher has joined a recognised regulator.

Specific reforms that followed include: the Data Protection Act 2018 incorporating some Leveson recommendations, including compensation for distress without pecuniary loss and requiring the ICO to produce a journalism code of practice; the College of Policing publishing guidance on media relations; and continued publication of ministerial transparency data.

However, a key provision - Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013, which would have created costs incentives for joining a recognised regulator - was never commenced and was repealed in 2024. The government stated this was because "this recommendation was contingent on a costs incentive framework that no longer exists."

Published evidence of progress is limited. Records indicate that 77 of the 92 recommendations (84%) remain listed as "Awaiting Action" with no documented evidence of implementation thirteen years after the report's publication.
Reforms Attributed to This Inquiry
- The Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press was established (granted 30 October 2013), creating a framework for press regulation
- The Press Recognition Panel was created under the Royal Charter as the recognition body for press regulators
- The Crime and Courts Act 2013 was enacted, including provisions for exemplary damages against publishers not belonging to a recognised regulatory body (Sections 34-42 commenced 3 November 2015)
- The Data Protection Act 2018 (Section 168) provides for compensation for distress without requiring pecuniary loss
- The Data Protection Act 2018 (Section 124) required the Information Commissioner's Office to produce a data protection and journalism code of practice, published in 2023
- The College of Policing published Authorised Professional Practice on Media Relations in May 2013
- Quarterly publication of ministerial transparency data on meetings with media proprietors, editors, and senior executives (continuing since 2010)
- Ofcom developed a measurement framework for media plurality in 2015 and publishes regular Media Nations reports
Reforms Reversed or Weakened
- Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013, which would have created costs incentives for publishers to join a recognised regulatory body, was enacted but never commenced. The Secretary of State announced on 1 March 2018 that it would not be commenced and would be repealed. It was repealed by Section 50 of the Media Act 2024 (Royal Assent 24 May 2024)
Unfinished Business
- No published evidence has been identified for action on 77 of the 92 recommendations (84%), which remain recorded as 'Awaiting Action'
- The formal review of damages for privacy and data protection breaches recommended by Leveson was not conducted, though court awards have increased through case law
- The recommendation to remove the broad journalism exemption from data protection law was not accepted
- No evidence of implementation for recommendations on civil justice reforms beyond the repealed Section 40
AI-generated narrative. Generated 26 Mar 2026 using claude-opus-4. Assessment is indicative, not authoritative.
1 year, 4 months Duration
£5.4m Total Cost
337 Witnesses
Government Response

Total Recommendations 92
Data last updated: 29 Nov 2012 · Source
Data verified: 26 May 2026 (import)
Blanket response: PM David Cameron responded to all 92 recommendations with a single statement accepting them "in principle" or "in part". No per-recommendation response was published.
How to read this

Government Response tracks what the government said it would do (accepted, rejected, etc.).

Full methodology

6 debates 62 questions 8 statements since Apr 2016
Written Question Press
Freddie van Mierlo (Liberal Democrat)
05 Jan 2026
Written Question Culture, Practices and Ethics of the Press Inquiry
Catherine West (Labour)
05 Jan 2026
Early Day Motion Right to trial by jury
Kim Johnson (Labour)
15 Dec 2025
Written Question Culture, Practices and Ethics of the Press Inquiry
Cat Eccles (Labour)
30 Jun 2025
Written Question Culture, Practices and Ethics of the Press Inquiry
Alex Brewer (Liberal Democrat)
30 May 2025
View all 80 mentions →
13 Jul 2011
Inquiry Announced
14 Nov 2011
Inquiry Established
29 Nov 2012
Final Report Published

Recommendations (92)

L1
Accepted in Part
Independent Board Governance
Recommendation
An independent self regulatory body should be governed by an independent Board. In order to ensure the independence of the body, the Chair and members of the Board must be appointed in a genuinely open, transparent and independent way, without … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles Lord Justice Leveson laid out for independent self-regulation, including an independent board (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO, established in September 2014, states that its board is appointed through an open process and includes a majority of independent members with no serving editors (IPSO, About Us, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS, recognised by the Press Recognition Panel in October 2016, states that its board appointments fully meet the Royal Charter criteria for independence (IMPRESS, Our Regulatory Scheme, accessed March 2026).
- The Press Recognition Panel stated in its 2024-25 Annual Report that IPSO has not applied for recognition under the Royal Charter, meaning its governance arrangements have not been independently assessed against the Leveson criteria (PRP Annual Report 2024-25, September 2025).
Press (Primary)
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L2
Accepted in Part
Chair Appointment Panel
Recommendation

The appointment of the Chair of the Board should be made by an appointment panel. The selection of that panel must itself be conducted in an appropriately independent way and must, itself, be independent of the industry and of Government.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principle of independent appointments for press self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO states that its chair is appointed through an appointments panel process. The current chair, Lord Faulks KC, was appointed in 2020 following an open recruitment process (IPSO, About Us, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS states that its appointments process meets the Royal Charter criteria, with an independent panel selecting the chair (IMPRESS, Our Regulatory Scheme, accessed March 2026).
- The two regulatory bodies operate separate, uncoordinated appointment processes rather than the single independent process Leveson envisioned.
Press (Primary)
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L3
Accepted in Part
Appointment Panel Composition
Recommendation
The appointment panel: (a) should be appointed in an independent, fair and open way; (b) should contain a substantial majority of members who are demonstrably independent of the press; (c) should include at least one person with a current understanding … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including independent appointments (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO states that its appointment panel includes a majority of independent members and at least one person with press experience (IPSO, About Us, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS states that its appointment panel composition fully meets the Royal Charter criteria, including independent majority and press experience requirements (IMPRESS, Our Regulatory Scheme, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO's appointment arrangements have not been assessed by the Press Recognition Panel, as IPSO has not sought Royal Charter recognition (PRP Annual Report 2024-25, September 2025).
Press (Primary)
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L4
Accepted in Part
Board Appointment Independence
Recommendation

The appointment of the Board should also be an independent process, and the composition of the Board should include people with relevant expertise. The requirement for independence means that there should be no serving editors on the Board.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principle of an independent board with no serving editors (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO states that its board has no serving editors and includes members with relevant expertise in areas including law, regulation, and public life (IPSO, About Us, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS states that its board includes no serving editors and has a majority of independent members (IMPRESS, Our Regulatory Scheme, accessed March 2026).
- The Press Recognition Panel confirmed in its third cyclical review of IMPRESS (2025) that IMPRESS continues to meet the Royal Charter criterion on board independence (PRP Cyclical Review, 2025).
Press (Primary)
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L5
Accepted in Part
Board Member Composition
Recommendation
The members of the Board should be appointed by the same appointment panel that appoints the Chair, together with the Chair (once appointed), and should: (a) be appointed by a fair and open process; (b) comprise a majority of people … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO states that board members are appointed through a fair and open process, with a majority of independent members and no serving editors (IPSO, About Us, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS states that its board composition meets the Royal Charter criteria, including being appointed by the same appointment panel that appoints the chair (IMPRESS, Our Regulatory Scheme, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO has not sought Royal Charter recognition and its governance arrangements have not been independently verified against the criteria (PRP Annual Report 2024-25, September 2025).
Press (Primary)
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L6
Accepted in Part
Funding Settlement
Recommendation
Funding for the system should be settled in agreement between the industry and the Board, taking into account the cost of fulfilling the obligations of the regulator and the commercial pressures on the industry. There should be an indicative budget … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including adequate funding (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO is funded by the press industry through a levy on subscribing publications. IPSO publishes financial information in its annual reports (IPSO Annual Reports, accessed March 2026).
- There is no independent certification that IPSO's funding is adequate for the purposes set out in Leveson's recommendations. IPSO's funding arrangements are agreed between IPSO and its subscribing members without external verification.
- IMPRESS is funded through an independent grant from the Alexander Mosley Charitable Trust, which the PRP has assessed as meeting the Royal Charter requirements on funding independence (PRP Cyclical Review, 2025).
Press (Primary)
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L7
Accepted in Part
Standards Code Responsibility
Recommendation

The standards code must ultimately be the responsibility of, and adopted by, the Board, advised by a Code Committee which may comprise both independent members of the Board and serving editors.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principle of a standards code (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO operates under the Editors' Code of Practice, maintained by the Editors' Code of Practice Committee. The IPSO board has ultimate responsibility for adopting the code (IPSO Editors' Code of Practice, accessed March 2026).
- The Editors' Code Committee includes serving editors alongside independent members, which Leveson permitted for the advisory code committee but not for the board itself.
- IMPRESS operates its own Standards Code, over which its board has full responsibility (IMPRESS, Our Regulatory Scheme, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L8
Accepted in Part
Code Content Requirements
Recommendation
The code must take into account the importance of freedom of speech, the interests of the public (including the public interest in detecting or exposing crime or serous impropriety, protecting public health and safety and preventing the public from being … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principle of a standards code covering privacy, accuracy, and the public interest (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- The IPSO Editors' Code of Practice covers accuracy (Clause 1), privacy (Clause 2), harassment (Clause 3), intrusion into grief or shock (Clause 5), discrimination (Clause 12), and the public interest (IPSO Editors' Code of Practice, accessed March 2026).
- The code includes a public interest exception permitting material that would otherwise breach the code where there is sufficient public interest justification.
- IMPRESS's Standards Code covers similar areas and has been assessed by the PRP as meeting the Royal Charter requirements (PRP Cyclical Review, 2025).
Press (Primary)
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L9
Accepted in Part
Internal Governance Processes
Recommendation
The Board should require, of those who subscribe, appropriate internal governance processes, transparency on what governance processes they have in place, and notice of any failures in compliance, together with details of steps taken to deal with failures in compliance. Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including internal governance requirements (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO's regulations require subscribing publications to have internal governance processes for handling compliance with the Editors' Code (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO has conducted zero standards investigations into subscriber governance failures in over ten years of operation (2014-2025), despite the power to do so being available to it (IPSO Annual Reports, accessed March 2026).
- The absence of any investigation means there is no published evidence that IPSO has enforced internal governance requirements or scrutinised compliance failures at subscribing publications.
Press (Primary)
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L10
Accepted in Part
Complaint Handling Mechanism
Recommendation
The Board should require all those who subscribe to have an adequate and speedy complaint handling mechanism; it should encourage those who wish to complain to do so through that mechanism and should not receive complaints directly unless or until … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including complaint handling (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO requires subscribing publications to have internal complaint handling mechanisms. Complaints must first be raised with the publisher before IPSO will consider them (IPSO, Make a Complaint, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS similarly requires complainants to contact the publication first (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO publishes data on complaint volumes and outcomes in its annual reports (IPSO Annual Reports, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L11
Accepted in Part
Power to Hear Complaints
Recommendation
The Board should have the power to hear and decide on complaints about breach of the standards code by those who subscribe. The Board should have the power (but not necessarily in all cases depending on the circumstances the duty) … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including complaints adjudication (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO hears and decides complaints about breaches of the Editors' Code by subscribing publications. IPSO accepts complaints from anyone, whether or not they are personally affected (IPSO, Make a Complaint, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS hears complaints about breaches of its Standards Code from any person (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO's annual reports indicate that it receives thousands of complaints annually but upholds a small proportion (IPSO Annual Reports, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L12
Accepted in Part
Complaint Decision Responsibility
Recommendation

Decisions on complaints should be the ultimate responsibility of the Board, advised by complaints handling officials to whom appropriate delegations may be made.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO's Complaints Committee, a committee of the IPSO board, has ultimate responsibility for complaint decisions. The committee may delegate initial handling to complaints officers (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS similarly has board-level responsibility for complaint adjudications (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
- Both regulators publish complaint decisions on their websites.
Press (Primary)
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L13
Accepted in Part
Complaints Committee Composition
Recommendation

Serving editors should not be members of any Committee advising the Board on complaints and any such Committee should have a composition broadly reflecting that of the main Board, with a majority of people who are independent of the press.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO's Complaints Committee has a majority of independent members and no serving editors. This is set out in IPSO's governance documents (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS's complaints and standards processes similarly exclude serving editors and maintain an independent majority (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
- The Press Recognition Panel confirmed in its third cyclical review of IMPRESS (2025) that IMPRESS meets the Royal Charter criterion requiring no serving editors on the complaints committee (PRP Cyclical Review, 2025).
Press (Primary)
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L14
Accepted in Part
Free Complaints Process
Recommendation

It should continue to be the case that complainants are able to bring complaints free of charge.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO provides a free complaint process. There is no charge for making a complaint to IPSO (IPSO, Make a Complaint, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS provides a free complaint process (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
- Both regulators publish details of their free complaint processes on their websites.
Press (Primary)
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L15
Accepted in Part
Power to Direct Remedies
Recommendation
In relation to complaints, the Board should have the power to direct appropriate remedial action for breach of standards and the publication of corrections and apologies. Although remedies are essentially about correcting the record for individuals, the power to require … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including remedial powers (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO states that it can direct corrections and apologies where complaints are upheld (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO's annual reports indicate that a small number of complaints are upheld annually relative to the total received, and the regulator has noted concerns about the timeliness of complaint resolution (IPSO Annual Reports, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS can also direct corrections, apologies, and other remedial action (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L16
Accepted in Part
Apology Placement Power
Recommendation

The power to direct the nature, extent and placement of apologies should lie with the Board.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO states that it has the power to direct the nature, extent, and placement of corrections and apologies (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO's published rulings indicate that this power has been exercised in some upheld cases, requiring corrections of specified wording and prominence.
- There is limited published evidence on the frequency and consistency with which IPSO directs specific apology placements, as distinct from corrections.
Press (Primary)
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L17
Accepted in Part
No Prior Restraint Power
Recommendation
The Board should not have the power to prevent publication of any material, by anyone, at any time although (in its discretion) it should be able to offer a service of advice to editors of subscribing publications relating to code … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including protection of press freedom (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- Neither IPSO nor IMPRESS has the power to prevent publication of material by anyone at any time. This aligns with Leveson's recommendation against prior restraint.
- IPSO operates a pre-publication advisory service, enabling editors to seek confidential guidance on code compliance before publication (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS does not exercise prior restraint over its members' publications (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L18
Accepted in Part
Investigation Powers
Recommendation
The Board, being an independent self-regulatory body, should have authority to examine issues on its own initiative and have sufficient powers to carry out investigations both into suspected serious or systemic breaches of the code and failures to comply with … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including own-initiative investigations (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO's regulations provide for the power to carry out standards investigations on its own initiative into suspected serious or systemic breaches.
- IPSO has conducted zero standards investigations in over ten years of operation (September 2014 to March 2026), despite multiple instances of alleged serious or systemic press misconduct during that period (IPSO Annual Reports 2015-2024, accessed March 2026).
- The Press Recognition Panel's 2024-25 Annual Report noted the absence of any standards investigation activity by IPSO (PRP Annual Report 2024-25, September 2025).
Press (Primary)
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L19
Accepted in Part
Financial Sanctions Power
Recommendation
The Board should have the power to impose appropriate and proportionate sanctions, (including financial sanctions up to 1% of turnover with a maximum of £1m), on any subscriber found to be responsible for serious or systemic breaches of the standards … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including financial sanctions (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO's regulations state that it has the power to impose fines of up to £1 million on subscribers found to be responsible for serious or systemic breaches.
- IPSO has imposed zero fines in over ten years of operation (September 2014 to March 2026). Not a single financial sanction has been levied against any subscribing publication (IPSO Annual Reports 2015-2024, accessed March 2026).
- The absence of any fines is directly linked to the absence of any standards investigations, as fines can only follow an investigation finding (IPSO Annual Reports, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L20
Accepted in Part
Compliance Record Keeping
Recommendation
The Board should have both the power and a duty to ensure that all breaches of the standards code that it considers are recorded as such and that proper data is kept that records the extent to which complaints have … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including record-keeping (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO publishes rulings on its website and maintains records of complaints and their outcomes. Rulings identify the publication, the relevant code clauses, and whether the complaint was upheld (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO's annual reports provide aggregate data on complaint volumes, outcomes, and breakdowns by publication (IPSO Annual Reports, accessed March 2026).
- There is limited published evidence on whether IPSO maintains comprehensive records of all code breaches as distinct from upheld complaints.
Press (Primary)
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L21
Accepted in Part
Annual Report Requirements
Recommendation
The Board should publish an Annual Report identifying: (a) the body's subscribers, identifying any significant changes in subscriber numbers; (b) the number of complaints it has handled and the outcomes reached, both in aggregate for the all subscribers and individually … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including annual reporting (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO publishes annual reports covering subscriber numbers, complaint statistics, outcomes, and financial information (IPSO Annual Reports 2015-2024, accessed March 2026).
- The annual reports do not comprehensively cover arbitration usage data, as the arbitration scheme operates separately from the main complaints process (IPSO Arbitration, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS also publishes annual reports and financial statements (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L22
Accepted in Part
Arbitration Service
Recommendation
The Board should provide an arbitral process in relation to civil legal claims against subscribers, drawing on independent legal experts of high reputation and ability on a cost-only basis to the subscribing member. The process should be fair, quick and … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including an arbitration service (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO introduced a compulsory arbitration scheme for 16 major newspapers, capped at £100 for claimants. The scheme is administered independently (IPSO Arbitration, accessed March 2026).
- The arbitration scheme operates outside the Royal Charter framework, as IPSO has not sought recognition. The scheme's scope and operation have not been independently assessed against Leveson's criteria.
- IMPRESS also offers an arbitration scheme that the PRP has assessed as meeting the Royal Charter requirements (PRP Cyclical Review, 2025).
Press (Primary)
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L23
Accepted in Part
Coverage of News Publishers
Recommendation

A new system of regulation should not be considered sufficiently effective if it does not cover all significant news publishers.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principle that regulation should cover all significant news publishers (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO covers most major national and regional newspapers, but significant publishers remain outside any regulatory system. The Financial Times, the Guardian, and Private Eye are not members of either IPSO or IMPRESS (various press reports, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS, the only recognised regulator, covers primarily small and independent publishers and does not include any major national newspaper titles (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
- The Press Recognition Panel stated in its 2024-25 Annual Report that the current system does not achieve the coverage Leveson envisioned, with the press industry remaining fragmented across regulated and unregulated publishers (PRP Annual Report 2024-25, September 2025).
Press (Primary)
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L24
Accepted in Part
Open Membership Terms
Recommendation

The membership of a regulatory body should be open to all publishers on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory terms, including making membership potentially available on different terms for different types of publisher.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including open membership (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO states that membership is open to all publishers on published terms, with different categories for national, regional, and digital publishers (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS states that membership is open to all publishers on fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory terms (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
- Both regulators publish their terms of membership, though the existence of two separate regulators with different terms means there is no single unified system of open membership.
Press (Primary)
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L25
Not Accepted
ICO and Regulatory Membership
Recommendation
In any reconsideration of the powers of the Information Commissioner (or replacement body), power should be given to that body to determine that membership of a satisfactory regulatory body, which required appropriate governance and transparency standards from its members in … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013, which would have created a costs incentive for publishers to join a recognised regulatory body, was enacted but never commenced (Crime and Courts Act 2013, s.40, legislation.gov.uk).
- The Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport stated on 1 March 2018 that the government intended to repeal Section 40 without commencing it (Oral Statement, DCMS, 1 March 2018).
- Section 40 was omitted from the Crime and Courts Act 2013 on 24 July 2024 by the Media Act 2024, s.50(2) (Media Act 2024, legislation.gov.uk).
- No alternative power was given to the Information Commissioner to take regulatory membership into account when considering enforcement action against publishers, as Leveson recommended.
Information Commissioner (Primary)
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L26
Not Accepted
Arbitration and Costs
Recommendation
It should be open any subscriber to a recognised regulatory body to rely on the fact of such membership and on the opportunity it provides for the claimant to use a fair, fast and inexpensive arbitration service. It could request … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013 would have allowed courts to consider regulatory membership when awarding costs in privacy and defamation claims against publishers.
- Section 40 was enacted in 2013 but was never commenced by any government (Crime and Courts Act 2013, s.40, legislation.gov.uk).
- The Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport stated on 1 March 2018 that Section 40 would be repealed without commencement (Oral Statement, DCMS, 1 March 2018).
- Section 40 was omitted from the statute book on 24 July 2024 by the Media Act 2024, s.50(2), removing the costs incentive entirely (Media Act 2024, legislation.gov.uk).
UK Government (Primary)
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L27
Accepted in Part
Legislative Recognition Requirements
Recommendation
In order to meet the public concern that the organisation by the press of its regulation is by a body which is independent of the press, independent of Parliament and independent of the Government, that fulfils the legitimate requirements of … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The government established a Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press, granted by Privy Council on 30 October 2013. The Charter was an alternative to the statutory underpinning Leveson recommended (Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press, October 2013).
- The Crime and Courts Act 2013 provided the legislative framework alongside the Royal Charter (Crime and Courts Act 2013, legislation.gov.uk).
- The Press Recognition Panel was established under the Royal Charter in November 2014 as the independent recognition body, fulfilling the requirement for a body independent of the press, Parliament, and government (PRP, accessed March 2026).
- The PRP is operational and has conducted cyclical reviews of recognised regulators (PRP Cyclical Reviews, accessed March 2026).
UK Government (Primary)
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L28
Accepted in Part
Recognition Body Role
Recommendation

The responsibility for recognition and certification of a regulator shall rest with a recognition body. In its capacity as the recognition body, it will not be involved in regulation of any subscriber.

Published evidence summary
- The Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press (October 2013) established the Press Recognition Panel as the recognition body, responsible for recognising and certifying press regulators (Royal Charter, October 2013).
- The PRP assesses applications for recognition against the Royal Charter criteria but does not itself regulate any publication or subscriber (PRP, accessed March 2026).
- The PRP recognised IMPRESS as an approved regulator in October 2016 following a full assessment against the recognition criteria (PRP, accessed March 2026).
- The PRP publishes its assessment reports, ensuring transparency in the recognition process (PRP Cyclical Reviews, accessed March 2026).
UK Government (Primary)
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L29
Accepted in Part
Recognition Requirements
Recommendation

The requirements for recognition should be those set out the recommendations set out above numbered 1 to 24 inclusive and more fully described in Part K, Chapter 7, Section 4 of the Report.

Published evidence summary
- The Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press (October 2013) sets out 29 recognition criteria derived from Leveson's recommendations 1-24 (Royal Charter, Schedule, October 2013).
- The Press Recognition Panel assessed IMPRESS against these 29 criteria and granted recognition in October 2016, confirming that IMPRESS met all requirements (PRP, accessed March 2026).
- The PRP has conducted three cyclical reviews of IMPRESS (most recently in 2025), each time confirming continued compliance with the recognition criteria (PRP Cyclical Reviews, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO has not applied for recognition, so its compliance with the criteria has not been independently assessed by the PRP (PRP Annual Report 2024-25, September 2025).
UK Government (Primary)
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L30
Accepted in Part
Periodic Review of Regulator
Recommendation

The operation of any certified body should be reviewed by the recognition body after two years and thereafter at three yearly intervals.

Published evidence summary
- The Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press (October 2013) requires the Press Recognition Panel to conduct cyclical reviews of recognised regulators (Royal Charter, October 2013).
- The PRP recognised IMPRESS in October 2016 and has conducted three cyclical reviews: the first approximately two years after recognition, and subsequent reviews at three-yearly intervals (PRP Cyclical Reviews, accessed March 2026).
- The third cyclical review of IMPRESS was completed in 2025, and the next review is due in 2028 (PRP, accessed March 2026).
- Review reports are published on the PRP website, enabling public scrutiny of the recognised regulator's ongoing compliance (PRP Cyclical Reviews, accessed March 2026).
UK Government (Primary)
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L31
Accepted in Part
Ofcom as Recognition Body
Recommendation
The role of recognition body, that is to say, to recognise and certify that any particular body satisfies (and, on review, continues to satisfy) the requirements set out in law should fall on Ofcom. A less attractive alternative (on the … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Leveson recommended that Ofcom should serve as the recognition body for press regulators, or alternatively a new body created by Royal Charter.
- The government chose the Royal Charter alternative, creating the Press Recognition Panel rather than giving the recognition role to Ofcom (Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press, October 2013).
- The PRP is operational and has fulfilled the recognition function, recognising IMPRESS in 2016 and conducting cyclical reviews (PRP, accessed March 2026).
- Ofcom has no role in press regulation recognition. The recognition function is performed by the PRP as an independent body funded through the Exchequer (PRP Annual Report 2024-25, September 2025).
Ofcom (Primary)
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L32
Accepted in Part
Multiple Regulatory Bodies
Recommendation
It should be possible for the recognition body to recognise more than one regulatory body, should more than one seek recognition and meet the criteria, although this is not an outcome to be advocated and, should it be necessary for … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press (October 2013) provides that the Press Recognition Panel may recognise more than one regulatory body, provided each meets the recognition criteria (Royal Charter, October 2013).
- IMPRESS is currently the only regulator to have been recognised by the PRP, having been granted recognition in October 2016 (PRP, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO has not applied for recognition. The PRP has stated that applications from other bodies would be considered on their merits (PRP, accessed March 2026).
- The Royal Charter framework accommodates the possibility of multiple recognised regulators, as Leveson recommended.
UK Government (Primary)
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L33
Accepted in Part
Duty to Protect Press Freedom
Recommendation
In passing legislation to identify the legitimate requirements to be met by an independent regulator organised by the press, and to provide for a process of recognition and review of whether those requirements are and continue to be met, the … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Leveson recommended that legislation should include an explicit duty on the government to uphold and protect the freedom of the press.
- The Crime and Courts Act 2013 and the Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press (October 2013) do not include an explicit statutory duty on the government to protect press freedom.
- No subsequent legislation has enacted such a duty.
- The Human Rights Act 1998, s.12 provides procedural protections for freedom of expression in legal proceedings, but this predates Leveson and does not constitute the specific duty on government that was recommended.
UK Government (Primary)
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L34
Accepted in Part
Compliance Reports and Senior Responsibility
Recommendation
In addition to Recommendation 10 above, a new regulatory body should consider requiring: (a) that newspapers publish compliance reports in their own pages to ensure that their readers have easy access to the information; and (b) as proposed by Lord … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO does not require newspapers to publish compliance reports in their own pages (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- Some subscribing publications have designated named senior individuals responsible for standards compliance, but this is not a universal requirement enforced by IPSO.
- No published evidence has been identified of a systematic compliance reporting regime operated by IPSO or its subscribers.
Press (Primary)
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L35
Accepted in Part
Kite Mark for Trusted Journalism
Recommendation

A new regulatory body should consider establishing a kite mark for use by members to establish a recognised brand of trusted journalism.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- No kite mark for trusted journalism has been established by IPSO (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS has a logo and mark that its regulated members can display, but this is not widely recognised by the public and does not function as the kind of kite mark Leveson envisioned (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
- No further published evidence of progress towards a kite mark has been identified.
Press (Primary)
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L36
Accepted in Part
Code Review with Public Consultation
Recommendation

A regulatory body should consider engaging in an early thorough review of the Code (on which the public should be engaged and consulted) with the aim of developing a clearer statement of the standards expected of editors and journalists.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including code review (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO's Editors' Code of Practice Committee conducts periodic reviews of the code. The code has been updated several times since IPSO's establishment in 2014 (IPSO Editors' Code of Practice, accessed March 2026).
- Public consultation is invited during code review processes, and the code committee publishes its conclusions on amendments.
- IMPRESS conducted a consultation on its Standards Code and has revised it (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L37
Accepted in Part
Pre-litigation Complaints
Recommendation

A regulatory body should be prepared to allow a complaint to be brought prior to commencing legal proceedings if so advised. Challenges to that approach (and applications to stay) can be decided on the merits.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO states that complaints can be brought before commencing legal proceedings. Complainants are not required to exhaust legal remedies first (IPSO, Make a Complaint, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS similarly accepts complaints before legal proceedings are commenced (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
- Both regulators publish their complaint acceptance criteria on their websites, confirming pre-litigation access.
Press (Primary)
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L38
Accepted in Part
Discriminatory Reporting Powers
Recommendation
In conjunction with Recommendation 11 above, consideration should also be given to Code amendments which, while fully protecting freedom of speech and the freedom of the press, would equip that body with the power to intervene in cases of allegedly … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO's Editors' Code includes Clause 12 on discrimination, but this only prohibits prejudicial or pejorative reference to an individual's characteristics. It does not extend to reporting about groups, as Leveson recommended (IPSO Editors' Code of Practice, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO has stated that Clause 12 cannot be used to address allegedly discriminatory reporting about groups, such as refugees or ethnic minorities, as it only covers individuals.
- IMPRESS's Standards Code includes a broader non-discrimination provision covering group-based reporting (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L39
Accepted in Part
Ring-fenced Enforcement Fund
Recommendation

A new regulatory body should establish a ring-fenced enforcement fund, into which receipts from fines could be paid, for the purpose of funding investigations.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including enforcement (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO has not established a ring-fenced enforcement fund (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO has imposed zero fines in over ten years of operation (September 2014 to March 2026), so there are no fine receipts to ring-fence for funding investigations (IPSO Annual Reports 2015-2024, accessed March 2026).
- No published evidence has been identified of any plan to establish such a fund.
Press (Primary)
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L40
Accepted in Part
Public Advice and Warning Service
Recommendation
A new regulatory body should continue to provide advice to the public in relation to issues concerning the press and the Code along with a service to warn the press, and other relevant parties such as broadcasters and press photographers, … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including public guidance (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO provides guidance to the public on press standards issues and on how to make complaints (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO operates a private advisory notice service, enabling individuals to notify the press that they do not welcome media attention. This continues the former Press Complaints Commission's desist service (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- IMPRESS also provides public information and guidance on press regulation and standards (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L41
Accepted in Part
Strict Accountability for Published Material
Recommendation

A new regulatory body should make it clear that newspapers will be held strictly accountable, under their standards code, for any material that they publish, including photographs (however sourced).

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- The IPSO Editors' Code of Practice holds publishers accountable for all published material, including photographs however sourced. Clause 1 (Accuracy) and Clause 2 (Privacy) apply to photographic as well as textual content (IPSO Editors' Code of Practice, accessed March 2026).
- IPSO rulings demonstrate application of the code to photographic content, including cases involving paparazzi photographs and images sourced from social media.
- IMPRESS's Standards Code similarly applies to all published material including photographs (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L42
Accepted in Part
Public Interest Guidance
Recommendation
A regulatory body should provide guidance on the interpretation of the public interest that justifies what would otherwise constitute a breach of the Code. This must be framed in the context of the different provisions of the Code relating to … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation including public interest guidance (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- The IPSO Editors' Code includes a public interest definition and lists exceptions where the public interest may justify what would otherwise be a code breach (IPSO Editors' Code of Practice, accessed March 2026).
- The Editors' Code Committee publishes guidance notes on interpretation of the public interest provisions.
- IMPRESS's Standards Code also provides public interest guidance (IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
Press (Primary)
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L43
Accepted in Part
Public Interest Record Keeping
Recommendation
A new regulatory body should consider being explicit that where a public interest justification is to be relied upon, a record should be available of the factors weighing against and in favour of publication, along with a record of the … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- There is no consistent requirement in the IPSO Editors' Code or IPSO's regulations for publishers to maintain records of the factors weighing for and against publication where a public interest justification is relied upon (IPSO Editors' Code of Practice, accessed March 2026).
- While the code states that the regulator will require the editor to demonstrate that he or she reasonably believed publication was in the public interest, it does not require contemporaneous records of the deliberation process.
- No published evidence of IPSO implementing a formal record-keeping requirement for public interest decisions has been identified.
Press (Primary)
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L44
Accepted in Part
Advisory Service on Public Interest
Recommendation

A new regulatory body should consider whether it might provide an advisory service to editors in relation to consideration of the public interest in taking particular actions.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- IPSO operates a pre-publication advice service through which editors can seek confidential guidance on code compliance (IPSO, accessed March 2026).
- This service provides general code compliance advice but is not the formal advisory service specifically focused on public interest considerations that Leveson envisioned.
- No published evidence has been identified of a dedicated advisory service for editors specifically on public interest decisions, as distinct from general code compliance queries.
Press (Primary)
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L45
Accepted in Part
Source Transparency
Recommendation
A new regulatory body should consider encouraging the press to be as transparent as possible in relation to the sources used for stories, including providing any information that would help readers to assess the reliability of information from a source … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- Source transparency has not been systematically addressed by IPSO as a regulatory requirement. The Editors' Code does not include a specific provision requiring publishers to disclose sources of stories or provide web links to original material (IPSO Editors' Code of Practice, accessed March 2026).
- Individual publishers have adopted varying practices on source attribution and linking, particularly for online content, but this is not a regulatory requirement.
- No published evidence of IPSO implementing source transparency standards has been identified.
Press (Primary)
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L46
Accepted in Part
Whistleblowing Hotline
Recommendation

A regulatory body should establish a whistleblowing hotline for those who feel that they are being asked to do things which are contrary to the code.

Published evidence summary
- The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted the principles for independent self-regulation (Oral Statement to Parliament, Prime Minister's Office, 29 November 2012).
- Neither IPSO nor IMPRESS has established a whistleblowing hotline for journalists or others who feel they are being asked to act contrary to the code (IPSO, accessed March 2026; IMPRESS, accessed March 2026).
- The Editors' Code of Practice includes a conscience clause (Clause 15) allowing journalists to refuse assignments that breach the code, but this is an individual protection, not a hotline or reporting mechanism.
- No published evidence of progress towards establishing such a hotline has been identified.
Press (Primary)
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L47
Accepted in Part
Journalist Contract Protection
Recommendation
The industry generally and a regulatory body in particular should consider requiring its members to include in the employment or service contracts with journalists a clause to the effect that no disciplinary action would be taken against a journalist as … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Editors' Code of Practice Committee maintains the Editors' Code used by IPSO. Clause 1 requires that the press "must take care not to publish inaccurate, misleading or distorted information or images" and provides for corrections (Editors' Code of Practice, IPSO, current version).
- IPSO's Regulations include provisions for editors and journalists to raise concerns about being required to act contrary to the Code, and IPSO handles complaints about alleged breaches (IPSO Regulations, IPSO).
- The recommendation's specific proposal for a contractual "conscience clause" as a standard term in journalist employment contracts has not been adopted as an industry-wide requirement. No published evidence of a regulatory body mandating such contractual terms has been identified to March 2026.
Press (Primary)
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L48
Not Accepted
Section 32 DPA Amendment
Recommendation
The exemption in section 32 of the Data Protection Act 1998 should be amended so as to make it available only where: (a) the processing of data is necessary for publication, rather than simply being in fact undertaken with a … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Section 32 of the Data Protection Act 1998 was repealed when the Data Protection Act 2018 came into force on 25 May 2018 (Data Protection Act 2018, legislation.gov.uk).
- The journalism exemption was replaced by Schedule 2, Part 5 of the Data Protection Act 2018, which provides that the exemption applies only where processing is carried out "with a view to the publication by a person of journalistic, academic, artistic or literary material" and the controller "reasonably believes that the publication of the material would be in the public interest" (Data Protection Act 2018, Schedule 2, Part 5, legislation.gov.uk).
- The new provision requires controllers to have regard to relevant codes of practice including the Editors' Code of Practice and the Ofcom Broadcasting Code when determining whether publication would be in the public interest (Data Protection Act 2018, Schedule 2, Part 5, paragraph 26(3), legislation.gov.uk).
UK Government (Primary)
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L49
Not Accepted
Narrow Section 32 Exemption Scope
Recommendation
The exemption in section 32 of the Data Protection Act 1998 should be narrowed in scope, so that it no longer allows, by itself, for exemption from: (a) the requirement of the first data protection principle to process personal data … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Section 32 of the Data Protection Act 1998 was repealed when the Data Protection Act 2018 came into force on 25 May 2018 (Data Protection Act 2018, legislation.gov.uk).
- Schedule 2, Part 5 of the Data Protection Act 2018 narrowed the journalism exemption in line with this recommendation. The exemption no longer provides blanket exemption from data protection principles. It permits derogation from specific listed GDPR provisions only where processing is necessary for journalistic purposes and publication would be in the public interest (Data Protection Act 2018, Schedule 2, Part 5, legislation.gov.uk).
- The requirement to process personal data fairly under the first data protection principle is no longer fully exempted — the new provision requires a public interest assessment and regard to relevant codes of practice (Data Protection Act 2018, Schedule 2, Part 5, paragraph 26, legislation.gov.uk).
UK Government (Primary)
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L50
Accepted
Compensation for Distress
Recommendation

It should be made clear that the right to compensation for distress conferred by section 13 of the Data Protection Act 1998 is not restricted to cases of pecuniary loss, but should include compensation for pure distress.

Published evidence summary
- Section 13 of the Data Protection Act 1998, which had been interpreted as requiring pecuniary loss for compensation claims, was repealed when the Data Protection Act 2018 came into force on 25 May 2018 (Data Protection Act 2018, legislation.gov.uk).
- Section 168(1) of the Data Protection Act 2018 explicitly provides that "in Article 82 of the UK GDPR... 'non-material damage' includes distress", confirming that compensation for pure distress is available without requiring pecuniary loss (Data Protection Act 2018, Section 168, legislation.gov.uk).
- This directly implements the recommendation that the right to compensation should not be restricted to cases of pecuniary loss.
UK Government (Primary)
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L51
Not Accepted
Repeal Procedural Provisions
Recommendation

The procedural provisions of the Data Protection Act 1998 with special application to journalism in: (a) section 32(4) and (5) (b) sections 44 to 46 inclusive should be repealed.

Published evidence summary
- Sections 32(4), 32(5), 44, 45, and 46 of the Data Protection Act 1998 were repealed when the Data Protection Act 2018 came into force on 25 May 2018 (Data Protection Act 2018, legislation.gov.uk).
- The procedural stay provisions that had allowed media organisations to halt ICO enforcement action simply by claiming journalistic purpose no longer exist in the DPA 2018 framework (Data Protection Act 2018, legislation.gov.uk).
UK Government (Primary)
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L52
Accepted in Part
ICO Balance of Public Interest
Recommendation
In conjunction with the repeal of those procedural provisions, consideration should be given to the desirability of including in the Data Protection Act 1998 a provision to the effect that, in considering the exercise of any powers in relation to … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Data Protection Act 2018 includes provisions requiring regard to press freedom when exercising regulatory functions. Schedule 2, Part 5, paragraph 26(2) requires that when determining whether a reasonable belief in public interest publication exists, "special importance of the public interest in the freedom of expression and information" must be considered (Data Protection Act 2018, Schedule 2, Part 5, legislation.gov.uk).
- Section 124 of the Data Protection Act 2018 requires the Information Commissioner to prepare a code of practice on data protection and journalism, in which the Commissioner must have regard to "the special importance of the public interest in the freedom of expression and information" (Data Protection Act 2018, Section 124, legislation.gov.uk).
UK Government (Primary)
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L53
Not Accepted
ICO Regard for Regulatory Membership
Recommendation
Specific provision should be made to the effect that, in considering the exercise of any of its powers in relation to the media or other publishers, the Information Commissioner's Office must have regard to the application to a data controller … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Data Protection Act 2018, Schedule 2, Part 5, paragraph 26(3) provides that when determining whether publication would be in the public interest, the data controller must have regard to any relevant code of practice or guidelines, including the Editors' Code of Practice (Data Protection Act 2018, Schedule 2, Part 5, legislation.gov.uk).
- This provides a mechanism for the ICO to consider the application of relevant regulatory standards when exercising its powers in relation to the media, as recommended (Data Protection Act 2018, legislation.gov.uk).
UK Government (Primary)
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L54
Not Accepted
Bring into Force Section 55 Penalties
Recommendation
The necessary steps should be taken to bring into force the amendments made to section 55 of the Data Protection Act 1998 by section 77 of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008 (increase of sentence maxima) to the extent … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Section 77 of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, which would have increased the maximum sentence for offences under section 55 of the Data Protection Act 1998, was never commenced (Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, legislation.gov.uk).
- Section 55 of the DPA 1998 was replaced by section 170 of the Data Protection Act 2018, which makes it an offence to knowingly or recklessly obtain or disclose personal data without the consent of the controller (Data Protection Act 2018, Section 170, legislation.gov.uk).
- Under section 196 of the DPA 2018, the maximum penalty for a section 170 offence is a fine on conviction on indictment, with no custodial sentence available (Data Protection Act 2018, Section 196, legislation.gov.uk).
- The recommendation that custodial sentences should be available for unlawful obtaining of personal data has not been implemented. No published government explanation for this decision has been identified to March 2026.
UK Government (Primary)
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L55
Not Accepted
ICO Prosecution Powers Extension
Recommendation

The prosecution powers of the Information Commissioner should be extended to include any offence which also constitutes a breach of the data protection principles.

Published evidence summary
- Under the Data Protection Act 1998, the Information Commissioner's prosecution powers were limited to specific offences including section 55 (unlawful obtaining of data). The recommendation was that these powers be extended to cover any offence also constituting a breach of data protection principles (Leveson Inquiry Report, Part K, Chapter 5, November 2012).
- The Data Protection Act 2018, section 170, provides the ICO with prosecution powers for unlawful obtaining or disclosing of personal data, and section 171 covers re-identification of de-identified data. The ICO may also issue enforcement notices and monetary penalty notices for breaches of data protection principles under Part 6 of the DPA 2018 (Data Protection Act 2018, legislation.gov.uk).
- The ICO's criminal prosecution powers remain limited to specific statutory offences rather than extending to any conduct constituting a breach of data protection principles more broadly. No published evidence that the recommendation was fully implemented has been identified to March 2026.
UK Government (Primary)
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L56
Accepted in Part
ICO Consult with CPS
Recommendation

A new duty should be introduced (whether formal or informal) for the Information Commissioner's Office to consult with the Crown Prosecution Service in relation to the exercise of its powers to undertake criminal proceedings.

Published evidence summary
- The Data Protection Act 2018 does not include a formal statutory duty for the ICO to consult with the Crown Prosecution Service before exercising criminal prosecution powers (Data Protection Act 2018, legislation.gov.uk).
- The ICO has published a Regulatory Action Policy which sets out how it exercises its enforcement powers, including prosecution, but no published evidence of a formal or informal duty to consult with the CPS on section 170 prosecutions has been identified to March 2026.
- No further published evidence on this specific recommendation has been identified.
UK Government (Primary)
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L57
Not Accepted
Reconstitute ICO as Commission
Recommendation
The opportunity should be taken to consider amending the Data Protection Act 1998 formally to reconstitute the Information Commissioner's Office as an Information Commission, led by a Board of Commissioners with suitable expertise drawn from the worlds of regulation, public … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Information Commissioner's Office was not formally reconstituted as an "Information Commission" led by a Board of Commissioners under the Data Protection Act 2018 (Data Protection Act 2018, legislation.gov.uk).
- The Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 renamed the office and made governance reforms. Section 124(5) of the DPA 2018 was amended by the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025, effective 20 August 2025 (Data (Use and Access) Act 2025, legislation.gov.uk).
- No published evidence that the ICO has been restructured with a board of commissioners with the specific expertise described in the recommendation (regulation, public administration, law, business) has been identified to March 2026.
UK Government (Primary)
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L58
Accepted in Part
ICO Policy on Press Regulation
Recommendation
The Information Commissioner's Office should take immediate steps to prepare, adopt and publish a policy on the exercise of its formal regulatory functions in order to ensure that the press complies with the legal requirements of the data protection regime. Read more
Published evidence summary
- Section 124 of the Data Protection Act 2018 required the Information Commissioner to prepare a code of practice containing practical guidance on the processing of personal data for journalistic purposes (Data Protection Act 2018, Section 124, legislation.gov.uk).
- The ICO published guidance on data protection and journalism, covering the legal framework under the DPA 2018 and UK GDPR and setting out how the ICO approaches regulation of the media (ICO, Data protection and journalism guidance).
- No published evidence of a comprehensive formal enforcement policy specifically addressing press compliance with data protection requirements, going beyond general guidance, has been identified to March 2026.
Information Commissioner (Primary)
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L59
Accepted in Part
ICO Good Practice Guidelines
Recommendation
In discharge of its functions and duties to promote good practice in areas of public concern, the Information Commissioner's Office should take immediate steps, in consultation with the industry, to prepare and issue comprehensive good practice guidelines and advice on … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Section 124 of the Data Protection Act 2018 required the Information Commissioner to prepare a code of practice on data protection and journalism, in consultation with trade associations and data subjects (Data Protection Act 2018, Section 124, legislation.gov.uk).
- The ICO published guidance on data protection and journalism covering the application of UK GDPR principles to journalistic processing, including the public interest test and the journalism exemption under Schedule 2, Part 5 DPA 2018 (ICO, Data protection and journalism guidance).
- No published evidence that the ICO consulted specifically with the press industry to issue the "comprehensive good practice guidelines" on standards for handling personal data that the recommendation envisaged has been identified to March 2026.
Information Commissioner (Primary)
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L60
Accepted in Part
ICO Public Guidance
Recommendation

The Information Commissioner's Office should take steps to prepare and issue guidance to the public on their individual rights in relation to the obtaining and use by the press of their personal data, and how to exercise those rights.

Published evidence summary
- The ICO publishes general guidance for individuals on their data protection rights, including rights of access, rectification, and erasure under the UK GDPR (ICO, Your data matters, ico.org.uk).
- No published evidence of ICO guidance specifically addressing individuals' rights in relation to obtaining and use of personal data by the press, as distinct from general data protection rights guidance, has been identified to March 2026.
Information Commissioner (Primary)
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L61
Accepted in Part
ICO Advice for Data Subjects
Recommendation
In particular, the Information Commissioner's Office should take immediate steps to publish advice aimed at individuals (data subjects) concerned that their data have or may have been processed by the press unlawfully or otherwise than in accordance with good practice. Read more
Published evidence summary
- The ICO publishes general guidance on making complaints about data protection breaches and on exercising individual rights under the UK GDPR (ICO, Make a complaint, ico.org.uk).
- No published evidence of specific ICO advice aimed at individuals concerned that their data has been processed by the press unlawfully, as a standalone resource distinct from general complaints guidance, has been identified to March 2026.
Information Commissioner (Primary)
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L62
Accepted in Part
ICO Annual Report on Press
Recommendation
The Information Commissioner's Office, in the Annual Report to Parliament which it is required to make by virtue of section 52(1) of the Act, should include regular updates on the effectiveness of the foregoing measures, and on the culture, practices … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The ICO publishes an Annual Report to Parliament each year as required by the Data Protection Act 2018 (ICO Annual Reports, ico.org.uk).
- The ICO Annual Reports contain sections on enforcement activity, sector-specific work, and regulatory priorities. However, no published evidence that the Annual Reports include regular dedicated sections on the culture, practices and ethics of the press in relation to data processing, as specifically recommended, has been identified to March 2026.
Information Commissioner (Primary)
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L63
Accepted in Part
ICO Adopt DPP Guidelines
Recommendation

The Information Commissioner's Office should immediately adopt the Guidelines for Prosecutors on assessing the public interest in cases affecting the media, issued by the Director of Public Prosecutions in September 2012.

Published evidence summary
- The Director of Public Prosecutions published Guidelines for Prosecutors on assessing the public interest in cases affecting the media in September 2012 (DPP Guidelines, CPS, September 2012).
- No published evidence that the ICO formally adopted these specific DPP guidelines for its own prosecution decisions in media-related cases has been identified to March 2026. The ICO has its own Regulatory Action Policy governing enforcement decisions.
Information Commissioner (Primary)
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L64
Accepted in Part
ICO Engage with Metropolitan Police
Recommendation
The Information Commissioner's Office should take immediate steps to engage with the Metropolitan Police on the preparation of a long-term strategy in relation to alleged media crime with a view to ensuring that the Office is well placed to fulfil … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Operation Elveden, the Metropolitan Police investigation into alleged payments to public officials by journalists, concluded in 2016. The investigation resulted in 34 arrests and several prosecutions, though many ended in acquittals (Metropolitan Police, Operation Elveden).
- Operation Weeting, the Metropolitan Police investigation into phone hacking, resulted in convictions including that of Andy Coulson in June 2014 (R v Coulson and Others, Central Criminal Court, 2014).
- No published evidence of a formal long-term strategy between the ICO and Metropolitan Police on alleged media crime, as specifically recommended, has been identified to March 2026.
Information Commissioner (Primary)
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L65
Accepted in Part
ICO Specialist Knowledge Review
Recommendation

The Information Commissioner's Office should take the opportunity to review the availability to it of specialist legal and practical knowledge of the application of the data protection regime to the press, and to any extent necessary address it.

Published evidence summary
- The ICO has published guidance on data protection and journalism as required by section 124 of the Data Protection Act 2018 (ICO, Data protection and journalism guidance).
- No published evidence of a specific ICO review of its specialist legal and practical knowledge relating to press data protection, or any resulting changes to staffing or expertise, has been identified to March 2026.
Information Commissioner (Primary)
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L66
Accepted in Part
ICO Organisation Review
Recommendation
The Information Commissioner's Office should take the opportunity to review its organisation and decision-making processes to ensure that large-scale issues, with both strategic and operational dimensions (including the relationship between the culture, practices and ethics of the press in relation … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The ICO has undergone organisational changes since the Leveson report, including the appointment of John Edwards as Information Commissioner in January 2022 (ICO, About the Commissioner).
- No published evidence of a specific organisational review focused on ensuring large-scale strategic issues relating to press data practices are addressed at appropriate decision-making levels, as recommended, has been identified to March 2026.
Information Commissioner (Primary)
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L67
Not Accepted
Sentencing Guidelines for Data Offences
Recommendation
On the basis that the provisions of s77-78 of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008 are brought into effect, so that increased sentencing powers are available for breaches of s55 of the Data Protection Act 1998, the Secretary of … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Sections 77-78 of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, which would have increased sentencing powers for section 55 offences under the DPA 1998, were never commenced (Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, legislation.gov.uk).
- Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013, which would have created a costs incentive linked to membership of a recognised press regulator, was never commenced and was repealed by section 50 of the Media Act 2024, effective 24 July 2024 (Media Act 2024, Section 50, legislation.gov.uk).
- The recommendation was contingent on both increased sentencing powers and the costs provisions being in force. Neither condition was met, and the Media Act 2024 formally removed the costs provision from the statute book.
UK Government (Primary)
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L68
Not Accepted
PACE Amendments Consideration
Recommendation
The Home Office should consider and, if necessary, consult upon: (a) whether paragraph 2(b) of Schedule 1 to the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (PACE) should be repealed; (b) whether PACE should be amended to provide a definition of … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) was replaced by the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) in April 2015 (NPCC, About Us).
- No published evidence that the Home Office conducted the recommended review of PACE Schedule 1, paragraph 2(b) or considered amendments to section 13(2) of PACE regarding journalism, has been identified to March 2026.
- The Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, section 70, extended the definition of "journalistic material" for PACE purposes, but this predated the Leveson recommendation. No subsequent PACE amendments addressing the specific issues raised have been identified.
UK Government (Primary)
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L69
Accepted in Part
Review of Damages for Media Torts
Recommendation
There should be a review of damages generally available for breach of data protection, privacy, breach of confidence or any other media-related torts, to ensure proportionate compensation including for non-pecuniary loss (all referable to the duration, extent and gravity of … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Section 168 of the Data Protection Act 2018 confirmed that compensation for distress (non-pecuniary loss) is available without requiring financial loss, applicable to all data protection claims including those involving the media (Data Protection Act 2018, Section 168, legislation.gov.uk).
- In Gulati v MGN Ltd [2015] EWCA Civ 1291, the Court of Appeal upheld substantial damages awards for phone hacking victims, with individual awards ranging from £72,500 to £260,250, significantly increasing the baseline for privacy damages (Gulati v MGN Ltd, Court of Appeal, December 2015).
- No published evidence that the formal review of damages generally available for media-related torts recommended by Lord Justice Leveson was conducted by the government or judiciary has been identified to March 2026.
UK Government (Primary)
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L70
Not Accepted
Civil Justice Council Damages Review
Recommendation
The Civil Justice Council should consider the level of damages in privacy, breach of confidence and data protection cases, being prepared to take evidence (from the Information Commissioner, the media and others) and thereafter to make recommendations on the appropriate … Read more
Published evidence summary
- No published evidence that the Civil Justice Council conducted a review of the level of damages in privacy, breach of confidence and data protection cases, as specifically recommended, has been identified to March 2026.
- Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013, which would have created costs incentives related to this recommendation, was never commenced and was repealed by the Media Act 2024 on 24 July 2024 (Media Act 2024, Section 50, legislation.gov.uk).
- Damages levels have evolved through case law, notably Gulati v MGN Ltd [2015] EWCA Civ 1291, but through judicial decisions rather than the formal review process recommended.
UK Government (Primary)
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L71
Not Accepted
Aggravated and Exemplary Damages
Recommendation
The Report of the Law Commission on Aggravated, Exemplary and Restitutionary Damages should be adopted in relation to its recommendations that legislation should provide that: (a) aggravated damages should only be awarded to compensate for mental distress and should have … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Law Commission Report on Aggravated, Exemplary and Restitutionary Damages (Law Com No. 247, 1997) recommended legislative reform of the damages framework. The Leveson report recommended that these proposals be adopted.
- No published evidence that the Law Commission's recommendations on aggravated, exemplary or restitutionary damages were adopted through legislation has been identified to March 2026.
- Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013, which addressed related costs issues, was never commenced and was repealed by the Media Act 2024 on 24 July 2024 (Media Act 2024, Section 50, legislation.gov.uk).
UK Government (Primary)
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L72
Accepted
Exemplary Damages for Media Torts
Recommendation
Exemplary damages (whether so described or renamed as punitive damages) should be available for actions for breach of privacy, breach of confidence and similar media torts, as well as for libel and slander. The application to a defendant of any … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Sections 34-39 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013 provide for exemplary damages against publishers not belonging to a recognised press regulatory body. These sections were commenced on 3 November 2015 (Crime and Courts Act 2013, Commencement No. 15 Order).
- However, section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013, which would have provided the accompanying costs incentive for publishers to join a recognised regulator, was never commenced and was repealed by section 50 of the Media Act 2024 on 24 July 2024 (Media Act 2024, legislation.gov.uk).
- The exemplary damages provisions remain technically in force but their practical effect is limited without the costs incentive that was intended to accompany them.
UK Government (Primary)
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L73
Not Accepted
Civil Procedure Rules on Costs
Recommendation
The Civil Procedure Rules should be amended to require the court, when considering the appropriate order for costs at the conclusion of proceedings, to take into account the availability of an arbitral system set up by an independent regulator itself … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013 was enacted to provide costs protections linked to membership of a recognised press regulator and the availability of an arbitral system. The section was never commenced (Crime and Courts Act 2013, legislation.gov.uk).
- Section 40 was repealed by section 50 of the Media Act 2024, effective 24 July 2024 (Media Act 2024, Section 50, legislation.gov.uk).
- No amendment to the Civil Procedure Rules to require courts to consider the availability of arbitration through a recognised press regulator when making costs orders, as recommended, has been made.
UK Government (Primary)
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L74
Not Accepted
Qualified One Way Costs Shifting
Recommendation
In the absence of the provision of an approved mechanism for dispute resolution, available through an independent regulator without cost to the complainant, together with an adjustment to the Civil Procedure Rules to require or permit the court take account … Read more
Published evidence summary
- This recommendation proposed enhanced legal aid or a cost-shifting mechanism for individuals bringing claims against publishers, in the absence of a recognised regulatory arbitration scheme.
- Section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013, which would have addressed costs in claims against publishers, was never commenced and was repealed by section 50 of the Media Act 2024, effective 24 July 2024 (Media Act 2024, Section 50, legislation.gov.uk).
- No alternative mechanism providing cost-free access to justice for individuals bringing media-related claims has been established through legislation or regulation to March 2026.
UK Government (Primary)
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L75
Accepted
Discontinue Off-the-record Term
Recommendation
The term 'off-the-record briefing' should be discontinued. The term 'non-reportable briefing' should be used to cover a background briefing which is not to be reported, and the term 'embargoed briefing' should be used to cover a situation where the content … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The College of Policing published Authorised Professional Practice (APP) on media relations, which includes guidance on the conduct of briefings and the terms under which information is shared with journalists (College of Policing, APP: Engagement and communication - Media relations).
- The NPCC, which replaced ACPO in April 2015, has published guidance on police-media relationships and briefing protocols (NPCC, Communications guidance).
- No published evidence that the specific terminology recommended — replacing "off-the-record" with "non-reportable briefing" and "embargoed briefing" — has been formally adopted as standard police terminology has been identified to March 2026.
National Police Chiefs Council (Primary) Police (Primary)
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L76
Accepted
ACPO Media Contact Recording
Recommendation
It should be mandatory for ACPO rank officers to record all of their contact with the media, and for that record to be available publicly for transparency and audit purposes. This record need be no more than a very brief … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The College of Policing Authorised Professional Practice on media relations requires chief officers to record contacts with the media and for these records to be available for audit purposes (College of Policing, APP: Engagement and communication - Media relations).
- The NPCC, which replaced ACPO in April 2015, adopted guidance requiring senior officers to record media contacts. Forces publish details of chief officers' media contacts as part of transparency requirements (NPCC, Communications guidance).
- Individual police forces publish registers of chief officer meetings and hospitality, including media contacts, as part of their transparency obligations under the Elected Local Policing Bodies (Specified Information) Order 2011 (Elected Local Policing Bodies (Specified Information) Order 2011, legislation.gov.uk).
Police (Primary) National Police Chiefs Council (Primary)
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L77
Accepted
Police Media Contact Rule
Recommendation
The simple rule included within the 'Interim ACPO Guidance for Relationships with the Media' should be adopted as good practice. This is: "Police officers and staff should ask: 'am I the person responsible for communicating about this issue and is … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The College of Policing published Authorised Professional Practice (APP) on media relations which adopted the principle that officers should consider whether there is a policing purpose for media engagement (College of Policing, APP: Engagement and communication - Media relations).
- The College of Policing Code of Ethics, published in 2014, sets out standards of professional behaviour including guidance on relationships with the media and the need for a legitimate policing purpose for such contacts (College of Policing, Code of Ethics, 2014).
- The NPCC adopted the principle from the interim ACPO guidance on media relationships into its standing guidance (NPCC, Communications guidance).
National Police Chiefs Council (Primary) Police (Primary)
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L78
Accepted
PNC Access Auditing
Recommendation
The Police Service should re-examine the rigour of the auditing process and the frequency of the conduct of audits in relation to access to the Police National Computer (PNC). Additional consideration should also be given to the number of people … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The College of Policing APP on information management covers access to the Police National Computer (PNC), including requirements for auditing and access controls (College of Policing, APP: Information management).
- HMICFRS inspections of individual police forces regularly assess information management and PNC access controls as part of their PEEL (Police Effectiveness, Efficiency and Legitimacy) inspections (HMICFRS, PEEL inspections).
- No published evidence of a specific national-level review of PNC audit rigour and access restrictions in response to the Leveson recommendation has been identified to March 2026.
Police (Primary) National Police Chiefs Council (Primary)
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L79
Accepted
ACPO Guidance on Hospitality
Recommendation

The recent ACPO Guidance should more specifically spell out the dangers of consuming alcohol in a setting of casual hospitality (without necessarily specifying a blanket ban).

Published evidence summary
- The College of Policing published Authorised Professional Practice on media relations which includes guidance on hospitality in the context of police-media interactions (College of Policing, APP: Engagement and communication - Media relations).
- The College of Policing Code of Ethics (2014) sets out standards on gifts, gratuities and hospitality, including the principle that officers should not accept hospitality that could compromise or appear to compromise their impartiality (College of Policing, Code of Ethics, 2014).
- No published evidence that the specific guidance on alcohol consumption in settings of casual hospitality with journalists, as recommended, has been spelled out in published police guidance to March 2026.
Police (Primary) National Police Chiefs Council (Primary)
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L80
Accepted
ACPO Post-employment Restrictions
Recommendation
Consideration should be given to the terms upon which ACPO rank officers are appointed and, in particular, whether these terms should include some limitation upon the nature of any employment within or by the media that can be undertaken without … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The College of Policing and NPCC have adopted guidance on standards of professional behaviour applying to senior officers, including requirements around business interests and secondary employment (College of Policing, Code of Ethics, 2014).
- The Policing and Crime Act 2017 strengthened the disciplinary framework for senior officers and introduced the power for the Home Secretary to make regulations about former police officers' conduct (Policing and Crime Act 2017, legislation.gov.uk).
- No published evidence of specific post-service employment restrictions limiting ACPO/NPCC-rank officers from taking employment with media organisations for a defined period has been identified in legislation or published guidance to March 2026.
National Police Chiefs Council (Primary) Police (Primary)
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L81
Accepted
Enhanced Whistleblower Protection
Recommendation
An enhanced system for protection of whistleblowers and for providing assistance for the Police Service on general ethical issues should at least comprise the following: (a) greater prominence should be given to the Public Interest Disclosure Act (PIDA) telephone line … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) was replaced by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) on 8 January 2018 under the Policing and Crime Act 2017 (Policing and Crime Act 2017, legislation.gov.uk).
- The IOPC operates a confidential reporting line for police officers and staff wishing to report wrongdoing (IOPC, Report police wrongdoing).
- The Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998 protections for whistleblowers continue to apply to police officers and staff (Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998, legislation.gov.uk).
- The College of Policing Code of Ethics (2014) includes guidance on the duty to challenge and report improper conduct, and the College of Policing published guidance on ethical dilemmas (College of Policing, Code of Ethics, 2014).
- No published evidence of a comprehensive review of the whistleblower protection system specifically in the police-media context, as recommended, has been identified to March 2026.
National Police Chiefs Council (Primary) Police (Primary)
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L82
Accepted in Part
Party Policy on Press Relations
Recommendation
As a first step, political leaders should reflect constructively on the merits of publishing on behalf of their party a statement setting out, for the public, an explanation of the approach they propose to take as a matter of party … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The UK Government publishes quarterly ministerial transparency data including details of meetings with newspaper and other media proprietors, editors and senior executives (GOV.UK, Ministers' transparency publications).
- No published evidence that the Labour Party, Conservative Party, or other parties have published formal party-level policy statements setting out their approach to conducting relationships with the press, as specifically recommended, has been identified to March 2026.
- Ministerial transparency covers government ministers but not backbench MPs, opposition frontbenchers, or party officials outside government.
Politicians (Primary)
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L83
Accepted
Disclosure of Media Contacts
Recommendation
Party Leaders, Ministers and Front Bench Opposition spokesmen should consider publishing: (a) the simple fact of long term relationships with media proprietors, newspaper editors or senior executives which might be thought to be relevant to their responsibilities and, (b) on … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The UK Government publishes quarterly ministerial transparency data including details of meetings between ministers and media proprietors, newspaper editors and senior media executives (GOV.UK, Ministers' transparency publications).
- These publications include meetings with external organisations (explicitly including "meetings with newspaper and other media proprietors, editors and senior executives"), overseas travel, and gifts and hospitality received, published as both PDF and CSV datasets (GOV.UK, Ministerial transparency data).
- The most recent publication covers October-December 2025, published on 24 March 2026, indicating the government continues to maintain this quarterly publication schedule (GOV.UK, Ministers' transparency publications, March 2026).
- No published evidence that opposition front bench spokespeople publish equivalent data on media contacts has been identified to March 2026.
Politicians (Primary)
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L84
Accepted
Immediate Transparency Need
Recommendation
The suggestions that I have made in the direction of greater transparency about meetings and contacts should be considered not just as a future project but as an immediate need, not least in relation to interactions relevant to any consideration … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The UK Government has published quarterly ministerial transparency data continuously since 2010, including details of meetings with media proprietors, editors and senior executives (GOV.UK, Ministers' transparency publications).
- These publications were already in operation at the time of the Leveson report (November 2012) and have continued without interruption. The recommendation was for immediate action, which was already being met by the existing transparency regime.
- The most recent quarterly data covers October-December 2025, published 24 March 2026 (GOV.UK, Ministers' transparency publications, March 2026).
Politicians (Primary)
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L85
Accepted
Plurality Focus on News
Recommendation
The particular public policy goals of ensuring that citizens are informed and preventing too much influence in any one pair of hands over the political process are most directly served by concentrating on plurality in news and current affairs. This … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Ofcom developed a Measurement Framework for Media Plurality, published in 2015, which set out metrics for assessing the sufficiency of plurality across news and current affairs media (Ofcom, Measurement Framework for Media Plurality, 2015).
- Ofcom publishes annual Media Nations reports which assess the state of UK media including news consumption across platforms, market shares, and media plurality indicators (Ofcom, Media Nations reports).
- The Enterprise Act 2002, section 58, includes media plurality as a public interest consideration in merger decisions, requiring assessment of "a sufficient plurality of views in news media" (Enterprise Act 2002, Section 58, legislation.gov.uk).
- The focus on news and current affairs plurality, as recommended, is reflected in both the Ofcom measurement framework and the statutory merger regime.
UK Government (Primary)
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L86
Accepted
Include Online in Plurality
Recommendation

Online publication should be included in any market assessment for consideration of plurality.

Published evidence summary
- Ofcom's Measurement Framework for Media Plurality, published in 2015, explicitly includes online news consumption in its assessment of media plurality (Ofcom, Measurement Framework for Media Plurality, 2015).
- Ofcom's annual Media Nations reports track online news consumption alongside traditional media, including metrics on digital news reach and engagement across platforms (Ofcom, Media Nations reports).
- The Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 introduced new competition powers for digital markets which have implications for online media plurality, though the Act focuses on competition rather than plurality specifically (Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024, legislation.gov.uk).
UK Government (Primary)
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L87
Accepted
Plurality Measurement Framework
Recommendation
Ofcom and the Government should work, with the industry, on the measurement framework, in order to achieve as great a measure of consensus as is possible on the theory of how media plurality should be measured before the measuring system … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Ofcom published its Measurement Framework for Media Plurality in 2015, developed in consultation with industry, setting out a methodology for measuring plurality across media types including availability, consumption, and impact metrics (Ofcom, Measurement Framework for Media Plurality, 2015).
- Ofcom publishes annual Media Nations reports which apply the plurality framework to assess the state of UK media markets, including news consumption patterns across television, radio, print, and online platforms (Ofcom, Media Nations reports).
- The framework was developed following consultation with the government and industry stakeholders, as recommended (Ofcom, Measurement Framework for Media Plurality, 2015).
Ofcom (Primary)
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L88
Accepted
Plurality Thresholds Lower Than Competition
Recommendation

The levels of influence that would give rise to concerns in relation to plurality must be lower, and probably considerably lower, than the levels of concentration that would give rise to competition concerns.

Published evidence summary
- Ofcom's Measurement Framework for Media Plurality (2015) distinguishes between competition concerns (market power) and plurality concerns (diversity of viewpoints), noting that plurality concerns may arise at lower levels of concentration than would trigger competition intervention (Ofcom, Measurement Framework for Media Plurality, 2015).
- The Enterprise Act 2002, section 58, provides for media public interest considerations in merger decisions separate from competition thresholds, allowing the Secretary of State to intervene on plurality grounds even where competition thresholds are not met (Enterprise Act 2002, Section 58, legislation.gov.uk).
- No published evidence that a specific quantitative threshold for plurality concerns, set at a level "considerably lower" than competition thresholds as recommended, has been formally adopted has been identified to March 2026.
UK Government (Primary)
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L89
Accepted
Full Menu of Plurality Remedies
Recommendation
Ofcom has presented the Inquiry and the Government with a full menu of potential remedies, and it has not been argued or suggested that any of them are inappropriate in principle. Each of them might be appropriate in a given … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Ofcom's Measurement Framework for Media Plurality (2015) identified a range of potential remedies for addressing plurality concerns, including structural remedies (divestiture, ownership limits), behavioural remedies (editorial independence requirements), and ongoing monitoring (Ofcom, Measurement Framework for Media Plurality, 2015).
- The Enterprise Act 2002, as amended by the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013, provides the Secretary of State with powers to refer media mergers to the Competition and Markets Authority on public interest grounds, with a full range of remedies available including divestiture and behavioural conditions (Enterprise Act 2002, legislation.gov.uk).
- The Communications Act 2003 includes media ownership rules which limit cross-media ownership (Communications Act 2003, legislation.gov.uk).
Ofcom (Primary)
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L90
Accepted
Periodic Plurality Reviews
Recommendation
The Government should consider whether periodic plurality reviews or an extension to the public interest test within the markets regime in competition law is most likely to provide a timely warning of, and response to, plurality concerns that develop as … Read more
Published evidence summary
- Ofcom publishes annual Media Nations reports which assess the state of UK media markets including news consumption and plurality indicators, providing a form of periodic review (Ofcom, Media Nations reports).
- No published evidence that a formal periodic plurality review mechanism, separate from merger-triggered reviews, has been established in legislation as recommended, has been identified to March 2026.
- The Enterprise Act 2002, section 58, provides for media plurality as a public interest consideration only in the context of specific merger proposals, not as a basis for periodic review of organic market developments (Enterprise Act 2002, Section 58, legislation.gov.uk).
UK Government (Primary)
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L91
Accepted
Media Merger Referral Consultation
Recommendation
Before making a decision to refer a media merger to the competition authorities on public interest grounds, the Secretary of State should consult relevant parties as to the arguments for and against a referral, and should be required to make … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Enterprise Act 2002, sections 42-58, require the Secretary of State to issue an intervention notice when referring a media merger on public interest grounds. The Secretary of State must consult Ofcom (under section 44A, inserted by the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013) and must publish reasons for the decision (Enterprise Act 2002, legislation.gov.uk).
- Ofcom has a statutory role in advising the Secretary of State on media public interest considerations in merger cases, including plurality (Enterprise Act 2002, Section 44A).
- The merger regime was applied in practice during the 21st Century Fox/Sky merger proposal (2017-2018), where the Secretary of State consulted Ofcom and the CMA, and published detailed reasons for the referral decision (DCMS, Fox/Sky merger, 2017-2018).
UK Government (Primary)
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L92
Accepted
Secretary of State Media Merger Decisions
Recommendation
The Secretary of State should remain responsible for public interest decisions in relation to media mergers. The Secretary of State should be required either to accept the advice provided by the independent regulators, or to explain why that advice has … Read more
Published evidence summary
- The Enterprise Act 2002 provides that the Secretary of State retains responsibility for public interest decisions in media mergers, including issuing intervention notices under section 42 (Enterprise Act 2002, legislation.gov.uk).
- Section 44A of the Enterprise Act 2002, inserted by the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013, requires the Secretary of State to consult Ofcom on media public interest considerations and to publish reasons for the decision (Enterprise Act 2002, Section 44A, legislation.gov.uk).
- This framework requires the Secretary of State either to follow the independent regulators' advice or to explain publicly why the advice was not followed, consistent with the recommendation.
- The framework was applied in the 21st Century Fox/Sky merger (2017-2018), where the Secretary of State published detailed reasoning for the referral to the CMA following Ofcom's public interest assessment (DCMS, Fox/Sky merger decision, 2017-2018).
UK Government (Primary)
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