As Zelo Street regulars will know,
former Tory MP Louise Mensch is one of the first to resort to screaming “liar” at anyone she so much as suspects
of less than total honesty. She is also prone to being less than totally honest
herself, and when it comes to the still-vexed subject of press regulation, she
has been all too ready to dispense with honesty altogether.
Has she got news for us? Not really
This is especially true when anyone mentions the Inquiry and
subsequent report of Lord Justice Leveson, which by the most fortunate of
coincidences means that Ms Mensch’s views, inevitably hostile to any reform
that may satisfy the Leveson recommendations, align very closely with those of
Rupert Murdoch, for whom she contributes a regular Sunday Sun column.
When the past week’s events in France – those surrounding
the Presidency of Monsieur le Shaggeur
Hollande – came to the attention of the Fourth Estate in the UK, Ms Mensch
clearly sensed an opportunity to put the boot in to Leveson, Hacked Off, and anyone
foolish enough to suggest there should be any sort of change which might give
the public any right of redress.
And so it came to pass: as Hollande declined to go into
detail with the press corps the other day, off she went: “Thank you #Leveson – coming true today in France. #royalcharter
#hackedoff #Hollande”. As Sir Sean nearly said, I think we got the point. But
Leveson’s Inquiry and report carries no weight in France. And there is no Government
regulation of the French press.
True, France has privacy
laws, but these should not be confused with censorship
or other kinds of regulation, which Ms Mensch has recently done not once,
but twice: later on, she cried “A
regulated press just got an EU ruling saying a woman can be convicted for
revealing details of HER OWN sex life ... As partner a PM”. And, as Jon
Stewart might have said, two things here.
One, she refers to an ECHR ruling, and the ECHR is not the
EU. And two, the case has nothing to do with press regulation, but
once again a privacy law, this
time in Finland. That the other party had been Prime Minister of the country
was largely irrelevant: the law applies to all citizens of that country. And Ms
Mensch should have thought very carefully before kicking the Finns.
That is because, for the past two years, Finland has taken
first place in the world press freedom
index – well ahead of both the UK and USA. The country has a system of
properly independent press self-regulation not unlike the setup which would
follow from the Leveson recommendations. So Louise Mensch has taken her serial
dishonesty and raised it a blatant foot in mouth.
An exceptional result, even for her. But Rupe will be happy,
so that’s all right, then.
No comments:
Post a Comment