The Maily Telegraph’s
Brussels point man, Bruno Waterfield, is not a happy bunny today. “Pathetic how pro-EU types, with support of
[the] entire UK state, big biz and main
parties [are] portraying themselves as
victims of EU-sceptical media” he Tweeted. What can be the reason for this
outburst? And why choose this particular moment to admit what Zelo
Street has been pointing out for some time?
I’ve long ago concluded that Waterfield was a partisan
Europhobe whose ability to lace his copy with whoppers and logic leaps would
not have even got him through the door when the Tel was a credible paper of record. That Tweet merely underscores
my analysis. Moreover, as the first response to it shows, there are plenty of
media voices lined up against the EU – especially his.
Waterfield’s unique approach to the EU first came before my
inspection in March 2011, when he fraudulently asserted that a transport white
paper “envisages
an end to cheap holiday flights from Britain to southern Europe”. He
was at it again the following month, misrepresenting
negotiations for the EU budget, which became “Brussels ... demanding” in the retelling.
We had to wait a while before the next slice of creative EU
reinterpretation, but it was worth it: in September 2011 came
the reheating of already old news concerning Herman van Rompuy, who had not
ruled out standing for another term as EU President. This became “wants second term as strengthened EU President”, along with talk of German
domination.
And that was as nothing compared to the
following month’s offering, “New euro ‘empire’
plot by Brussels”. This was substantially fictitious, based on news
from the previous August, and for good measure was laced with lots of those
anonymous quotes from “sources”, some
of whom were “senior”. Part of the
story had “emerged” from them. They
were even “indicating privately”.
Bruno then rounded
off the year telling Telegraph
readers that “Britain faces a wave of
hostile legislation battered through the European Union by a new ‘Euro-Plus’
bloc dominated by France and Germany”. As legislation passes through the
European Parliament, not the EU, this was clearly another slice of creative
retelling, as were the “senior figures”
calling for the UK “to be driven out of
Europe”.
He was still
at it earlier this week, pretending that the EU “wants power to sack journalists” and inventing a Leveson component
in a report to the European Commission that it did not contain. So it’s no
surprise that Waterfield views so many as “Pro-EU”,
but given his ability to get unashamedly Europhobic copy into the Tel, he can have few complaints about
those of opposing view.
And he can count himself lucky the Telegraph is no longer a paper of record.
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