Still trading on the trust of readers who often believe that,
in choosing the sole surviving broadsheet daily title, they are buying into a
paper of record, the Maily Telegraph
has, under the less than benign ownership of the Barclay brothers, been
conspicuous in its parading of loaded or even mostly untrue stories, and today’s
lead on the HS2 project is
a fine example of the genre.
“Treasury minister’s battle to scrap HS2” declares the headline,
from which it can only be deduced that Andrea Leadsom is fighting even from
within the Government against the project, especially when the Tel also says “Andrea Leadsom, the new
Treasury minister, urges David
Cameron to rethink the HS2 rail project, saying £50 billion investment is poor
value for money”.
Moreover, the
article then tells that “David
Cameron’s new Treasury minister has called for a ‘dramatic rethink’ of the High
Speed 2 rail project. Andrea Leadsom has warned that the £50 billion scheme
does not represent value for taxpayers’ money. The economic case for the rail
line was ‘questionable and rapidly deteriorating’, she said, promising to ‘fight
against’ the project”.
On top of that, “Her
warnings over the economic justification for the project will be particularly
damaging, coming from a Treasury minister widely respected for her economic
expertise”, which sounds good, but is nothing more than the Tel gilding their non-existent lily.
And, as any fule kno, ministers do not oppose Government policy openly. So
would the Tel like to come clean?
“The Telegraph
analysed the public statements of six Tory ministers whose constituencies are
most severely affected by the scheme ... Mrs Leadsom’s comments ... were published on her constituency
website before she became Economic
Secretary to the Treasury, and remained there until Friday night when the site
appeared to be temporarily unavailable”.
So when the Tel
said that Ms Leadsom “urges ... rethink”,
that should have read “urged”.
Otherwise it’s not true. What the MP has done is to take the accepted anti-HS2
line when on the back benches, which is predictable as the proposed route
passes through her constituency. Now she is bound by the collective
responsibility of being part of the Government.
Indeed, the Tel
has conceded that Ms Leadsom’s spokesman “would
not say how she planned to vote on the main Bill on Monday or whether she would
even attend the debate. The MP said in a statement that she expected the Bill
to pass through the Commons ‘with a large majority’”. So former back
bencher accepts collective responsibility is the story, and it isn’t really
much of a story at all.
Still, what’s a little falsehood and misinformation to the
Tel? No change there, then.
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