No doubt there will be claims that articles like the
attack on former PM Tony Blair by (thankfully) former Tory MP Louise Mensch
yesterday are mere spontaneity, and that Creepy Uncle Rupe and his clan do not
interfere in the workings of their newspapers, but the Murdoch sense of
entitlement, and the manner in which it is policed and, if necessary, enforced
loom large all too often.
Not nearly as nice as he looks
What might I mean by “policed
and enforced”? Part of the answer has, remarkably, been
supplied by the Mail, suggesting
that the Murdochs’ behaviour is too much even for them: “outgoing Ofcom chief executive Ed Richards claimed he had been
threatened during his eight years in the £393,000-a-year post. He alleged that one media mogul had shouted at him
in his office: ‘We know who you are, we know who your friends are and we know
where you live.’”
And who might that have been? “The comments, made at a leaving party at
Ofcom’s London HQ on Monday, drew gasps of astonishment from guests. Mr
Richards did not identify the person but guests said they believed he was
referring to Rupert Murdoch’s son James”. Isn’t Junior just the chip off the old block?
The flashpoint was over BSkyB: “Ofcom opposed the takeover – despite support for James Murdoch from
David Cameron and Tory Culture Secretary and friend Jeremy Hunt. But the
Murdochs had to abandon the plan”. And this didn’t help: “Humiliatingly, he was forced to quit as
chairman of BSkyB after Mr Richards questioned whether the company was ‘fit and
proper’ to broadcast in the UK”.
Yes, Junior had
been disrespected big time. Now, some may find the idea of the Murdochs
behaving like a bunch of amateur Mafiosi hard to believe, but this is not an
isolated incident, as former Independent
editor Simon
Kelner can testify. In the run-up to the 2010 General Election, the paper
had suggested the public could make their own minds up, and that they alone
would decide the outcome.
After the Indy said “Rupert
Murdoch won’t decide this election. You will”, Junior and Rebekah Brooks marched into the paper’s newsroom. Kelner
was told “You’ve impugned the reputation
of my family”. Junior “became furious at my bemusement that he
should find our campaign so upsetting, given that one of his newspapers famously
claimed that it did indeed decide elections”.
Kelner concluded of Junior and Ms Brooks “Their use of language and the threatening
nature of their approach came straight from the ‘Mafioso for Beginners’
handbook”. Some papers were dismissive of Tom Watson’s select committee comment
to Junior that “You must be the first mafia boss in history who didn't know he was
running a criminal enterprise”. The Mail
was
one of them.
But even the Mail
has changed its tune. It’s an offer they
can now refuse.
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