Cast your mind back to the early days of the phone hacking
saga: after the Guardian broke the
story in July 2009, much of the press either declined to cover it, or suggested
it was a “non-story”. Some singularly
clueless pundits even concluded that what turned out to be a newspaper – the now-defunct
Screws – engaged in criminal
activity, was in fact Labour payback for Damian McBride.
Typical of the latter point of view was Tim Montgomerie, who
told at ConHome “On Andy Coulson, the
BBC is dancing to Labour’s tune” (the article has, to preserve the
credibility of its author, since been removed), and in
a Comment Is Free piece asserted that
“The attack on Andy Coulson is politically
motivated: a desperate bid by Labour to get payback for the ousting of Damian
McBride”.
Given this less than fruitful line of argument, and that
stories of historic child sex abuse in and around the Westminster Village have
extended to all the major political parties of the time, one might hope that
today’s pundits would stop and think before playing the same card deployed so
woefully wrongly by Monty over phone hacking. But that hope would be misplaced
when it comes to Charles Moore.
Moore, the self-appointed carrier of whatever sacred flame may
have been handed down by the spirit of Mrs T, under
the headline “What the Dickens? These
inquiries into historic cases of child abuse are just symptoms of fear”,
suggests that he is, as ever, right, and that Dickens could not have been,
because he supposedly couldn’t pronounce “paedophile”
correctly.
And then Moore sells the pass: “it is about the coming general election. It should not escape notice
that Mr Danczuk is a Labour MP whose particular skill is beating Liberals. Tom
Watson, one of the great self-appointed commanders in the children’s crusade,
is a well-known Labour attack-dog against the Tories. Labour love a narrative
of an evil past in which Margaret Thatcher ‘tore the heart out of communities’
and ‘threw millions on the scrapheap’”. And there’s more.
“If [Labour] can persuade people that [Mrs T’s] cronies were a gang of sex criminals, they
will be able to terrify David Cameron’s Conservatives away from policies that
made her win all the elections she contested. Paedophile accusations give them
good cover because they do not sound party political”.
Even allowing for the vaguely paranoid tinge of Moore’s
sentiments, the idea that the push for an Inquiry into child sex abuse in and
around Parliament could be some kind of organised Labour plot as part of a
General Election strategy is so far-fetched as to be risible. Yet, as with
phone hacking, there is, perhaps inevitably, someone prepared to wheel out the
left versus right argument once more.
It was wrong then, and it is wrong now. Charles Moore should be ashamed.
Seriously, his attitude is disgusting. It should all be exposed which ever party is involved whether the tming is inconvenient or not.
ReplyDeleteTo be fair he does have the credibility of a bigraphy to upkeep.
ReplyDeleteI notice from his own bio that he left the Anglicans (over ordination of women priests) to join the Roman Catholic branch of Christianity in spite of their own problems of paedophile activity. Were those revelations part of the Labour plot too?
ReplyDeleteSour grapes at work?
But we have had the Savile saga which surely must have been a Tory plot against the Labour controlled BBC.
And then another plot against the Liberals (and partly Labour) - Cyril Smith.
Enough plotting rope even for the explosive Guido to hang himself with?
The plot lines of another series of "The thick of it" could prove interesting (if allowed by the censors).
It would be an unworthy thought for it to cross the mind of anyone that Lord Snooty, having been around the high Tory right for all his so say working life, might know exactly who is in the firing line.
ReplyDelete