While the attention of the Fourth Estate was elsewhere
yesterday, Young Dave appeared before the Commons liaison committee, and among
the subjects on which he was questioned was press regulation. Given the
delay in getting the Royal Charter before the Privy Council, and the moves by
some newspapers to set up their own “new”
regulator, the questions were inevitable.
And the answers will not make good reading for the victims
of press intrusion and other less than totally ethical behaviour, as Cameron
showed signs of wobbling, suggesting that, if
it was left solely to the Tory Party, there would be a move to compromise
with the press. Added to any surprise at reading that might be the fact that
the press has not picked up on the comments today.
Cameron started off by confirming that he supported the
Royal Charter agreed by the three major Westminster parties. Then he started to
back-pedal: he was disappointed that the press had acted as they had, and hoped
that everyone would “see sense”. But
then it was back to affirming that the Government was “nearly there”. So he was referring to the cross-party Charter, yes?
Maybe not: “Cameron
says the charter the Tories wanted was somewhere between the government one and
the newspaper industry one. ‘So I'm not really the problem here’”. And, as
Jon Stewart might have said, two things here. If the Tories wanted some other
kind of Royal Charter, why did they pass the cross-party one when it came to a
vote in the House of Commons?
And if they were happy at the time – hence passing the
cross-party Charter – what has happened since to change their minds? Might this
have something to do with a General Election being less than two years away,
and the Tories seeing an opportunity to curry favour with the Fourth Estate in
exchange for an easier ride in the run-up to the poll? Cynical, moi? [Yes-Ed.]
The rest of Cameron’s responses on the subject will hardly
inspire confidence chez Jefferies, McCann, Dowler et al: “He is still committed to the cross-party charter. But he wants the
industry to support it”. That sounds like compromise. “He expects the government's charter to be adopted. The press have said
they will not support this. He cannot see a way forward. But there may be a way
forward, he says”. Ditto.
It’s no use Cameron vacillating now, though. Any
half-competent politician would have thought this through before he started the
hare running by setting up the Leveson Inquiry. One wonders what spinmeister
supreme Alastair Campbell makes of it all: it is interesting to note that
Cameron lost the services of Andy Coulson in January 2011, so he was long gone
when Dave appointed Leveson.
The Prime Minister cannot evade this one. He failed to game it from the start.
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