Titled “WHITTINGDALE : HOW FLEET STREET BOSSES BURIED A SCANDAL AND GOT THEIR MAN INTO CAMERON'S CABINET”, and subtitled “The full inside account of the story everyone wants to read, but no one wants to write”, Cusick’s project expands on Nick Mutch’s post by detailing the cover-up undertaken by the press.
Cusick spells it out: “IS JOHN WHITTINGDALE fit to be Britain’s Culture Secretary? Is there any critical information that should have made David Cameron think twice before bringing him into the cabinet? Should he be making key decisions that affect the future of the BBC and the national press? Four national newspaper groups hold the answers to these questions. Yet no one has published anything and each have their reasons for wanting to keep Mr Whittingdale exactly where he is”.
As I pointed out last weekend, it’s not just about Whittingdale’s dalliance with Olivia King - although, as I’ll show, that would be serious enough on its own - but the way the larger part of the Fourth Estate has effectively conspired to get him into his current ministerial berth and keep him there. This serves two purposes: stalling on the Leveson proposals, and doing the press’ bidding by taking the axe to the hated BBC.
It gets worse: note that Cusick talks of “Four national newspaper groups”. Zelo Street can reveal that the number of newspapers that spiked the Whittingdale story is greater than four. And it gets worse still: it can also be revealed that Whittingdale was in his relationship with Olivia King at the same time as she was also seeing a known gangster.
How significant is that? Put it this way: the individual concerned was convicted of a firearms offence after the Metropolitan Police discovered a machine gun in the back of his car. That is why the Profumo parallel was being made, and why Whittingdale’s behaviour could have constituted a serious security risk.
James Cusick will probably be ostracised by many in the press for his actions, such is their perverse elevation of Omertà over honesty and openness. But you can help his cause, and that of genuinely open journalism, by supporting the project HERE.
Cusick intends to publish on Sunday. Then we can see the extent of the cover-up.
7 comments:
Without dismissing this scandal (and it is a serious one) I think the Profumo comparison is a red herring. Profumo was Minister for War, and had access to nuclear weapons secrets (among other varieties of classified defence information) and his dalliance was with a woman (who was not a prostitute) who was sleeping with a Soviet spy, which was obviously a major threat to UK/US security.
Again, that's not to dismiss this scandal, but it's clearly of a different character and complexion, and trying to force it to fit another narrative could be counterproductive because it gives so many openings for hostile critics to downplay its significance.
And he wants just the 3 grand for publishing a story that presumably was conducted at the Independent's expense, just never used. This is crap, Tim.
@2
James Cusick has foregone any severance payment from the Indy by not signing a gaging order.
He will be shunned by the rest of the press - see post - for breaking ranks and his earning potential will suffer as a result.
Plus you mistakenly assume the Indy was going into detail on the cover-up by all those other papers.
So no, it's not crap.
The Daily Mail today is pontificating about the public's "right to know" about the dalliances of a media celebrity but is failing to report this story. Is Mr Dacre a hypocrite or is Mr Dacre a hypocrite?
I couldn't care less what people do in the privacy of sex life between consenting adults. It might be worth a chuckle or two, but nothing else.
But there is a difference where this sordid matter is concerned: That is, as Tim rightly points out, our corrupt media have deliberately sought to conceal the whole absurd business to provide political advantage. Since Whittingdale is in public life it is he who gained advantage. Which of course makes it an issue for the general public.
Apart from that, I find some amusement in the notion of a dominatrix in black leather knocking seven bells out of Whittingdale's arse with a rolled up issue of the Financial Times. Each to his/her own I say. Except of course for political corruption.
The point is, the more one sees of the Bullingdon gang the more one realises they are not only as socially warped than we imagined......they're even more warped than we can imagine.
Can you think of anyone, ANYONE in the Cabinet who could be described as "Pure as the driven snow"?
I can't think of anyone in the Cabinet that isn't a cruel and mendacious class warrior.
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