It’s a rare occasion that sees the Daily Mail take the same line with its front page lead as that in
the Guardian, but today saw just
that: the latter, exceptionally, used almost all that front page for “Coulson: the criminal who had Cameron’s
confidence”, while the Mail tells “Questions
over PM’s judgment as spin doctor he took to No 10 faces jail for phone hacking
while Rebekah Brooks is freed”.
The legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre’s less than subtle
flourish is to add “Humiliation for
Cameron”. The Mail has even roped
in Stephen “Miserable Git” Glover to
put the boot in: “The inescapable
truth is that Mr Cameron’s original embrace of Mr Coulson, as well as his later
championing of him, raise alarming questions about his judgment and good sense
that have not gone way”
Nick
Davies at the Guardian notes “The ease with which [Coulson] was
able to fool the Conservative leadership will also add weight to questions about David Cameron’s judgment in
hiring the former News of the World editor without checking his background –
and about the reliability of evidence that the prime minister gave under oath
to the Leveson inquiry”.
Meanwhile, the
Mail points out that Mr Justice
Saunders’ condemnation of those, including Young Dave, who made ill-advised
remarks yesterday afternoon – while the jury were still deliberating – was not
the first time he had put his foot in it that way, there being the precedent of
his “team Nigella” remark, delivered
somewhere between Downing Street and Beaconsfield services late last year.
And Daily Mail Comment
will
not cheer the PM: “So why did Mr
Cameron ignore wiser counsels, giving him this job at the heart of the Tory
Party and the Government? Two reasons – neither worthy of him. One was a foolish belief that the former editor of
a red-top paper might be just the man to lend the Tories the common touch they
so manifestly lacked. The other, more questionable still, was his determination
to strengthen his links with Rupert Murdoch’s media empire”.
True, the paper fouls up by then claiming that the
Leveson Inquiry was precipitated by a claim made about Milly Dowler’s
voicemails, which it was not. But that Dacre is prepared to question Cameron’s
judgment does not bode well for the period running up to the next General
Election.
And the Mail’s
editor is rather close to Nick Davies on the point of Cameron and Murdoch: “according to senior Tory officials, Cameron
made no attempt to seek a police briefing or to check the court record, even
when he became prime minister and took Coulson into Downing Street. Cameron has
been accused of employing Coulson in spite of his past in order to build a
bridge to Rupert Murdoch”.
When Dacre follows the paper that broke the phone hacking
story – that’s trouble.
1 comment:
It could have been worse - he could have offered Luis Suarez a fourth chance to act as his rottweiler. Might still have been an improvement on Michael Green, sorry Seb Fox.
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