While most of the Fourth Estate may pretend that the Leveson
Inquiry, its subsequent report, and the cross-party Royal Charter, is in the
past and long forgotten, the reality is rather different: while sham regulator
IPSO gives the pretence of reform, the new and fully independent IMPRESS moves
towards full readiness, and the campaigners of Hacked Off continue to press for
real reform.
Tom Watson MP
Part of the Hacked Off campaign is the annual Leveson
lecture, which this year had to be moved from the House of Commons to One Great
George Street, such was the demand for tickets. Here, Labour MP Tom Watson gave that
lecture, the subject being “Unfinished
Business”. Zelo Street was there, and indeed was still there later on at
the Westminster Arms for a pint or three.
And, had the press or its supporters bothered to look in, they
would see just how counterproductive their behaviour has become: to the ranks
of those finding themselves on the wrong end of bad behaviour has now been added
Andy Miller, recently
victorious in a libel battle with the Daily
Mail, which lost around £3 million going all the way to the Supreme Court.
He bought drinks afterwards.
Also present was the Labour Party member who saw the
pre-determined cynicism and sneering directed at Mil The Younger after his
recent Senate House speech, and confronted the press pack afterwards, only to
see them avert their gaze and snigger to themselves. The bad behaviour may give
the hacks and pundits a nice warm feeling, but it is repelling the public with
the certainty of night following day.
Then the considerable presence of John Sweeney, whose recent
Panorama expose of “fake sheikh” Mazher Mahmood was fought
through the courts by lawyers funded by the Murdoch empire, was revealed to
long and loud applause. Sweeney, to the shame of the BBC, has, along with
producer Meirion Jones, just been made redundant. Their revelations caused the
Police to reopen many files.
That several hundred turned out on a cold and windy December
evening to cheer Watson’s speech, which noted of the press’ and Police’s past
relationship “you don’t know who’s
working for whom, but you know who they’re working against – the public” ,
should tell the Murdoch, Rothermere, Desmond and Barclay Brothers empires
something – if only they would stop and listen.
Indeed, it has now been revealed that the Metropolitan
Police have reopened 25 cases where
Mahmood’s evidence was involved, and defendants “will be provided with a ‘disclosure pack’
which ‘they may consider undermines the conviction in a specific case,’ a
spokesperson said”. Mahmood was protected and encouraged by
the Murdoch press as he went about his “stings”.
Unfinished business, indeed. And it will be finished one
day, whoever opposes it.
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