Local press reporting of opposition to
the 2003 Iraq War in the UK and the
case for reconceptualizing notions of
legitimacy and deviance
Ian Taylor
University of Leicester, UK
The decision to embark upon military action is often controversial—the 2003
Iraq War certainly was. Studies investigating the reporting of the controversies
surrounding the use of force have frequently made use of Hallin’s (1986)
‘Spheres of opinion’ model so as to distinguish between ‘legitimate’ and
‘deviant’ opinion. They have also identified a number of recurrent features
to the reporting of demonstrations, including anti-war demonstrations, that
work to position oppositional movements within the sphere of ‘deviant’
opinion. This frame of reporting is often referred to as the ‘protest paradigm’.
Yet after having examined how opponents of the Iraq War were reported on in
a select sample of local newspapers, it soon became apparent that things were
not so straightforward in this case. Those who marched against the invasion
were never overtly condemned in local reporting, although they were some-
times treated with a measure of wariness. Furthermore there were even
occasions when they were treated as partially legitimate participants in
debates about the crisis. These findings then call for a reconsideration of
‘legitimacy’ and ‘deviance’ and the idea that there might be clear blue water
between them. Consequently, a more nuanced model for calibrating the
degree of acceptability or otherwise of the anti-war movement (and other pol-
itical actors) has been developed for—and is outlined in—this article.
keywords anti-war movement, local press, legitimacy, deviance, protest
paradigm
Legitimacy matters for politicians, pressure groups, and protesters because those in
possession of it typically have regular access to the media; because legitimacy has a
journal of war & culture studies, Vol. 7 No. 1, February, 2014, 36–53
© W. S. Maney & Son Ltd 2014 DOI 10.1179/1752628013Y.0000000006