He should have realised from his affair with Petronella
Wyatt: London’s occasional Mayor Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson is never
going to have enough financial, and therefore legal, clout to hold the press at
bay for long. This is especially important for any politician unable to keep
his trousers firmly zipped up, and today it has once again been Bozza’s
undoing.
We knew about his
affair with Ms Wyatt, mainly because of Bozza’s ridiculous protestations of
innocence, including the “inverted
pyramid of piffle” remark, and his subsequent sacking by Michael Howard for
lying about it. What
was also known was that he had a
later affair with Helen Macintyre, which resulted in Bozza’s long-suffering
wife Marina throwing him out of the marital home.
What caused Bozza to be ejected was the thought that Ms
Macintyre’s newly born daughter was the result of the affair. So it might be
thought that this news would just filter out and be reported, but that thought
would have been misplaced. There was even the obligatory source close to Bozza
(ie himself) waffling “Is Boris the
father of this child? It’s quite likely he hasn’t the faintest idea”.
Like heck he didn’t: his wife didn’t
chuck him out of the house on a mere whim. This was not helped by Ms Macintyre
not exactly keeping her own counsel on the identity of the father. That was
most unwise, because the next thing was that the Daily Mail came sniffing after the story. And the paper has the
very deepest pockets when it comes to fighting its legal disputes.
So the Mail was
not put off, even when Ms Macintyre and her backers took their privacy case to
appeal before Master of the Rolls Lord Justice Dyson. They had been instructed
to pay damages for publishing a photograph of the child, and did not contest
the ruling. But in the case that led to the appeal, the Mail had prevailed in the matter of reporting the affair and its
consequences.
The
appeal upheld that judgment. And what Bozza and Ms Macintyre did not want
to hear was
this comment: “The
core information in this story, namely that the father had an adulterous affair
with the mother, deceiving both his wife and the mother's partner and that the
claimant, born about 9 months later, was likely to be the father's child, was a
public interest matter which the electorate was entitled to know when
considering his fitness for high public office”.
Thus the Mail is
now crowing “Boris's
secret lovechild and a victory for the public's right to know: Judge rejects
lover's attempts to keep daughter's birth quiet”, and whoever is
backing Ms Macintyre is rather worse off. The moral of the story is not only to
keep schtum, but not to get into a legal war with the Daily Mail.
Especially if Bozza is involved. Cripes, readers! Oo-er!! Yikes chaps!!!
What happened to the so-called chilling effect of Leveson that would not allow such public interest stories to be published?
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