L42 Response 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 the public interest, so as to make it easier to justify what might otherwise be considered as contrary to standards of propriety.

Published Evidence Summary
The following publicly available evidence relates to this recommendation:
- 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).
How was this evidence gathered?
Evidence searched by Claude (Anthropic) on 10 Apr 2026
Checked data held on this site (government responses, progress updates, independent evidence)
Jurisdiction
UK-wide
Response
Accepted in Part
Accepted in Part UK Government
29 Nov 2012

The Prime Minister stated on 29 November 2012 that he accepted "the principles that Lord Justice Leveson has laid out" for independent self-regulation, including "an independent board, a standards code, an arbitration service and the power to demand up-front, prominent apologies and impose million-pound fines." However, he rejected statutory underpinning, expressing "serious concerns and misgivings" about crossing "the Rubicon of writing elements of press regulation into the law of the land." The Royal Charter on Self-Regulation of the Press was granted on 30 October 2013, establishing the Press Recognition Panel as the recognition body. IPSO was established in September 2014 but has not sought Royal Charter recognition. IMPRESS was recognised by the PRP in October 2016. Source: https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/david-cameron-statement-in-response-to-the-leveson-inquiry-report

Read Full Response
Note: 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.
Published Evidence

Published assessments of progress from inspectorates, select committees, official progress reports, and other sources. Source type badge indicates whether each assessment is independent or government self-reported.

Good Progress
27 Feb 2025
IPSO Other

IPSO and its Editors' Code Committee provide guidance on public interest interpretation. The code includes a public interest definition and exceptions.

View detailed findings

Public interest guidance exists within the Editors' Code framework.

IPSO Editors' Code - public interest View Source
Source
Report An Inquiry into the Culture, Practices and Ethics of the Press 29 Nov 2012
Responsible Bodies
Press Primary
Recommendation age 13.5 yrs
Last formal update 4931 days ago