The Fourth Estate loves to talk about the Leveson Inquiry –
and most of the talk remains hostile – but the detail of what their own Great
and Good said is gradually being forgotten, perhaps conveniently. Editors and
owners gave evidence on oath, so if any of them misled the Inquiry, that would
be serious. Well, the impression is given that one of them most certainly did
mislead it.
That's what I think of youse bladdy Inquiry, Pommie bastards!
As the deeply subversive Guardian noted at the time, Rupert Murdoch regaled the Leveson Inquiry with dire predictions. Print media, he asserted, was a sickly child, and what he characterised as “over-regulation” could kill it off. This was a successful career press man speaking; all press watchers sat up and took notice. So let us revisit events two years ago, and see what Rupe said – under oath.
“Every newspaper has
had a very good run... It's coming to an end as a result of these disruptive
technologies ... I think we will have both [internet and print news] for quite
a while, certainly ten years, some people say five. I'd be more inclined to say
20, but 20 means very small circulations ... I think you have a danger of
regulating, putting regulations in place which will mean there will be no press
in 10 years to regulate”. Then, to be on the safe side, he kicked the BBC.
So Rupert Murdoch told Leveson that printed newspapers would
be around for “certainly” ten years.
Well, Rupe’s a hard-nosed business type, isn’t he? So he will look to invest on
the basis of certainty, not a world 20 years in the future where there would be
“very small circulations”.
Coincidentally, Rupe’s print operation has
recently left its home in the east London district of Wapping, and
relocated to what has been dubbed the Baby Shard. So we know that there is some
future in printed newspapers. The question is, how long has Murdoch judged that
future to be? What is his call on the length of time that his titles will “certainly” be around?
And that figure, press watchers, is not a mere ten years:
Rupe’s print empire has signed a THIRTY
YEAR LEASE on the Baby Shard. Worse for the Dirty Digger’s reputation, this
appears not to have been some more recent change of mind, as a look at the
timeline shows. He gave his Leveson testimony – on oath – in April 2012. The
decision to leave Wapping was taken the following month.
News UK must have had some idea where it was going at that
time, although the announcement of the Baby Shard move did not come until July
2013. What we appear to have here is Murdoch very deliberately misleading the
Leveson Inquiry: saying print would be around for “certainly” ten years, then planning on a period three times as
long.
What is worse is that, thus far, nobody has called him out on it.
The fact that he (or his company) have signed a long term lease may well be a business porposition not entirely related to a "press" operation as a long term lease could well be a valuable commodity for resale in the short term (if the bubble doesn't burst!).
ReplyDeleteWhat is scary is that he may be planning on staying around for thirty years!
Looking at the state of him I don't think HE will manage another 5 years, never mind 30!
ReplyDelete@ SSAAATAAAN
ReplyDeleteOmerta precludes you revealing any alleged deal you may have done with him, you devil you?