Royal Charter on self-regulation of the press
The Royal Charter on self-regulation of the press is a United Kingdom royal charter approved in 2013. The Queen set her seal on the document at a meeting of the Privy Council after the failure of two High Court actions by Pressbof to prevent it.[1] The operation of the Charter comes under two Acts of Parliament, the Crime and Courts Act 2013 and the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013.[2]
The Charter creates the Press Recognition Panel (PRP) as a corporation to carry out activities relating to the recognition of press regulators.[3] In a last-minute change the government decided that the system would not come into effect until a year after the PRP was established, taking the process beyond the 2015 general election.[4]
In October 2016 IMPRESS became the UK's first approved press regulator after its application for recognition under the Royal Charter was granted.[5]
References
- Burrell, Ian (30 October 2013). "Queen sets seal on cross-party politicians' charter for press regulation". The Independent. Retrieved 31 October 2013.
- Young, Toby (8 October 2013). "Nothing Maria Miller said will make the press more likely to sign up to Hacked Off's Royal Charter". The Telegraph. Retrieved 30 October 2013.
- Para 3.1 of Royal Charter
- Wintour, Patrick (30 October 2013). "Press regulation royal charter given go-ahead by the Queen". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 October 2013.
- "Panel Gives Alternative Press Regulator Royal Charter". Press Gazette.