Last year, as if the Press Complaints Commission (PCC) had
not already lost enough of its credibility over Phonehackgate and its
consistent inability to prevent the Fourth Estate from behaving as it bloody
well pleased, Richard “Dirty” Desmond
withdrew his titles from its oversight. Partly this was down to the influence
of the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre, and partly down to Des’ innate
tightness.
Richard f***ing Desmond? I hate the c***
Desmond, as with all his business decisions, had looked at
the numbers and concluded that he was better off out of the PCC, even if the
odd defamation case got slapped on the Express
or Daily Star, that last
demonstrating how useless the PCC had become. That was bad enough, but now the
problem looks as if it will be getting him to come back into the fold post
Leveson.
According
to the Times – which may indicate
that the story has been run to try and suggest that whatever is recommended by
Leveson is automatically Not A Very Good Thing – Des is digging his heels in at
the prospect of being forced to join whatever successor body replaces the PCC.
He is thought to be ready to argue that this would be an abuse of competition
law.
But, given his competition would all have signed up to the
new body, it would be him that was gaining
an unfair advantage, rather than him being disadvantaged by joining. And that
means there are just two real reasons why he would not want to play ball. One
of those is that he and Dacre mutually detest each other, and that the Vagina
Monologue was head of the PCC Editors’ Code Committee.
But all that would need to be done to allay that fear is to
make the PCC replacement completely independent of editors, their hacks and
their pundits. That should not prove an unduly difficult task to achieve.
Indeed, keeping Dacre and the rest of the tabloids off the new body – given much
of their past behaviour – would be a very good advert for it. That would not be
a problem for Desmond.
Then the only possible reason for Dirty Des to stay out
would be because he’s still hermetically tight. But for him to argue
competition law, if the denial of the PA wire is balanced by his not having to
pay his subs to the new body, looks pointless. Of course, Des does have one
nuclear option, and that is to threaten to sell his titles and quit the
business altogether.
But there’s one very clear problem with that approach: the Express and Daily Star have had their journalist ranks weakened so severely
under his less than benign leadership that there may not be anyone prepared to
take them on, except to effectively buy the circulation and asset strip the
rest. And to think that in its heyday the Express
regularly sold four million copies a day.
Run into the dirt for a fast buck? That’ll be another Benchmark Of Excellence.
1 comment:
There appears to be a pre-emotive campaign against Leveson's assumed recommendations. The feeble Chris Blackhurst went everywhere complaining about the Section 13 notices, apparently unaware that they were to advise about the bad stuff only. This week the pointless Peter Preston was on the BBC media show supporting John Wittingdale's assumptions too. This is all bullshit because the bullies have been caught, held up to public scrutiny and are now shitting themselves.
Preston and Blackhurst seem unaware of the Slippery Slope Fallacy for a start.
I very much doubt that Leveson will advise that we need new legislation. The press seem to think he will. We'll see.
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