This week, Rupe’s downmarket troops at the Super Soaraway
Currant Bun have decided to let all those households that choose not to have
anything to do with this singularly unpleasant rag know what they have been
missing, with a special issue commemorating Englishness, or rather, what the
Murdoch press define as Englishness. Thus millions of free copies are being
delivered by post.
Sadly for the Sun
faithful, not everyone wants to have the paper dumped on the doormat,
especially those living on Merseyside, where the infamous “The Truth” issue, coming in the wake of the Hillsborough stadium
disaster, precipitated a boycott of the paper that still endures, despite the
hacks eventually apologising. But no party leader wants to antagonise the
press, if they can avoid it.
So it was that Mil The Younger dutifully posed – as Young
Dave and Corporal Clegg had already done – with the souvenir issue, and almost
immediately suffered a barrage of condemnation for his trouble. Very few Labour
supporters seemed to understand the no-win situation in which the leader of Her
Majesty’s Opposition found himself, given the difficult relationship between
Murdoch and Labour.
Eoin Clarke tried to be thoughtful: “Ed Miliband is a good man. He has the right solutions for the UK. But
he has made a mistake posing with the Sun. He must apologise, soon”. Mark
Ferguson had no such qualms: “I’m
disappointed and confused by this photo” he told, before signposting a link
to the contribution to the debate authored by Himself Personally Now.
That this is not a straightforward matter was suggested by
Steve Rotheram, the MP whose constituency includes Anfield: “Ed will make a statement on the matter. He never
meant any offence, but in my opinion it shouldn’t have happened in the first
place”. Sunny Hundal pointed out “The
Sun would have attacked Ed M for not posing for pic, so it’s lose/lose”
before asking the question many will want answering.
“But they will attack
him constantly anyway. Why bother engaging?” to which the answer might
include factors like the degree of hostility – Miliband will have heard from
Neil Kinnock what happens if you don’t engage – and, the real elephant in the
room, the Royal Charter on press regulation, which was finalised in his office
at Westminster, although not over takeaway pizza.
Miliband almost certainly is still looking at playing the
long game on that one. And, in case anyone thought Clegg got a free pass, he
didn’t: as Ross Hawkins pointed out, “Leader
of Lib Dems in Liverpool Richard Kemp calls on Clegg to apologise for posing
with a copy of yesterday’s Sun”. The Lib Dems ran Liverpool council from
1998 to 2010. Some of them might like to see a way back for the party.
Politics and Murdoch is never straightforward. Nobody should pretend otherwise.
2 comments:
mine have been seperated into individual sheets, folded to envelope size and deposited in nearest postbox for Royal Mail to dispose of. "have" was not a mistake, I had three copies!
Every time i see a Volks Wagen or a Porsche I feel obliged to break it into pieces in solidarity with my forebears who fought the invaders. Strangely no politicians defend my actions.
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