This morning, it is not only England’s cricketers who are
experiencing batting difficulties: the blessed Tone is also having to go in facing
a hostile barrage, and one that may not be as well-intentioned as Mitchell
Johnson. Because his long love affair with Rupert Murdoch has been well and
truly torn asunder by a welter of recrimination, aided by a generous helping of
nudge-nudgery.
Beyond an accusing Mail
On Sunday headline, thundering “Murdoch’s
Feud With Blair Over Wife Wendi”, the rest of the text does not
make happy reading for Tone and his pals, going on “'Terminal' end of friendship over claims of 'multiple encounters'
between ex-PM and tycoon's wife”. Are you insinuating something, Simon
Walters? “Oh no, no, no, no, no, no ...
YES”.
The nod and wink could not be more suggestive: “Sources
claim that Mr Blair and Ms Deng had ‘multiple
encounters’ of
which Mr Murdoch was unaware ... The former Prime Minister has always
maintained his friendship with Ms Deng is platonic ... The Blair camp insists the claims are
'ridiculous and untrue'”. Note use of the word “encounter”. We’ve all seen Brief Encounter.
So what’s involved? “Sources
close to Mr Murdoch in London say that staff at his home in California claimed
Mr Blair and Ms Deng stayed there overnight at the same time on weekends in
October 2012 and April this year, without Mr Murdoch’s knowledge ... [plus]
a weekend overnight stay at Mr Murdoch’s
home in Los Angeles and meetings in London and New York”.
As Sir Sean nearly said, I think we got the point, especially
when Walters deploys the
denial-that-is-merely-cover-as-insisted-upon-by-the-legal-team: “There is no suggestion by this newspaper of
any impropriety by Mr Blair or Ms Deng. And Mr Blair’s friends have repeatedly
denied he had an affair with Ms Deng”. No suggestion, but the sub-text is spun more
heavily than a Shane Warne flipper.
Add to this the
Telegraph lifting the story –
both they and the Mail would normally
steer clear of discussing other media figures, as part of the press adherence
to the code of Omerta – and you can
see that the papers sense there is more to this than has so far been revealed.
And Blair’s camp is not helping its cause by dismissing Murdoch’s statements as
“the ravings of a sad old man”.
Rupe’s official
statement should be read carefully: “Rupert
has been thorough, careful and has not acted lightly ... If you think that
Rupert made a decision to end his marriage and a long-term friendship without
just cause, you are sorely mistaken”. That means he’s done his homework, he
took the decision on the basis of thorough research, and there may be more to
come – at his discretion.
So Tony Blair would be
best advised to keep schtum for some time to come.
"That means he’s done his homework, he took the decision on the basis of thorough research, and there may be more to come – at his discretion."
ReplyDeleteThe same research used for whatever has gone on at The Sun and the NOTW?
I suspect a rather higher standard applies when it relates to Himself Personally Now.
ReplyDeletehere's a really mad scenario.
ReplyDeleteTone and Mrs M were having encounters pre-Iraq and the CIA/NSA knew.
W phones Tone and asks for help invading Iraq. "Are you completely insane?" asks Tone. "Possibly" says W, "but also well informed....."
go on, tell me with a straight face that is impossible.