In Flat Earth News, his go-to book on
the workings of the press, Nick Davies observed of the Daily Mail’s legendarily foul mouthed editor Paul Dacre that “Dacre works long hours, so everybody else
works long hours. He works Christmas Day, so they do too (There was a famous
row one Christmas when Dacre swore furiously at a journalist who had dared to
go out for lunch)”.
What the f***'s wrong with sitting on a pile of money, c***?!? Er, with the greatest of respect, Mr Jay
So the Vagina Monologue is eminently well qualified for the
attribute “Scrooge”. And, like the
Dickens original, he is well practiced in accumulating money while begrudging a
decent living to others. The only change from A Christmas Carol is that Dacre hates
a more selective part of the population: migrants, the poor, anyone of
liberal view, ethnic minorities, and even the disabled.
And, while his paper has been kicking anyone it can find who
does not have the money to fight back, Dacre has been trousering yet More And
Bigger Paycheques For The Benefit Of Himself Personally Now. As
the Guardian has noted, “Paul Dacre’s pay and bonus package soared by
25% during 2014, taking the total remuneration of Britain’s best-paid newspaper
editor to £2.4m”.
How much? Brucie says higher: “The editor-in-chief of the Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday and
Mail Online received an extra £1m this year – double his usual £500,000 annual
salary supplement – on top of basic salary and fees of £1.38m”. Half a
million quid is a mere “supplement”?
Well, no: a whole million is a mere “supplement”
this year. And, as the man said, there’s more.
“Along with £34,000 in
taxable benefits – including a company car with taxable value of £15,000, car
allowance of £10,000, fuel benefit of £6,500, and medical benefits of about
£3,000 – this pushed his total remuneration for the year up to £2.41m, up
from £1.84m in 2013”. And someone drives him around: no behind-the-wheel
stress for him. Private healthcare is thrown in, too.
Then, while his paper is putting the boot into anyone and
everyone benefiting from EU farm subsidies – even the Royals – Dacre is
trousering hundreds of thousands of pounds of them for his Scottish estate. And
no doubt the Mail will be against the
proposed Mansion Tax, given Dacre has a place in Belgravia (equals expensive)
and a Home Counties pile (probably ditto).
The really sad thing, though, is that, unlike Dickens’ book,
there will be no spirits of Christmas past, present and future visiting the
Vagina Monologue. There will be no pang of consciousness to shake the certainty
underpinning his boiling anger at a world in which young people enjoy
themselves, different races and nationalities come together in harmony, and
fewer and fewer want to hate their neighbour.
So sad to be alone in so many ways this Christmas. But it’s his own choice.
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