Archive for April, 2010
WILL ANDY ALLOW THE TORIES TO DEFY MURDOCH?
Would a new Tory government defy the wishes of the Murdochs and press ahead with introducing custodial sentences for convictions under the Data Protection Act?
In early 2008, when the Labour government was about to enact a new Criminal Justice and Immigration bill, they were heavily leaned on by newspaper bosses, principally News International, to strike out Clause 77, which made persons found guilty of offences under the 1998 DPA liable to a term of imprisonment. The papers claimed that this would unreasonably restrain their journalists (despite the important provision of a public interest defence for bona fide investigative journalists).
Mr Brown, whom the Sun newspaper still purported to support at the time, caved in quickly and the clause, while not entirely removed from the bill, was relegated to the status of a mere order-making power, which simply gives the Justice Secretary the power ask Parliament (and other interested parties) at some later date if they wanted it activated.
Since the Sun declared last September for the other side (for all the help that may be), Mr Brown’s Justice Department announced the following month that it was launching a consultation paper with a view to reporting its conclusions on January 31st, and, if positive, putting the new DPA custodial penalties in place in April – this month. The results of the consultation have not been published and there is no sign that this important deterrent to data theft, especially by tabloid journalists seeking private details of celebrities’ lives, will ever be put on the statute book. In any case, in a month’s time there may be a Conservative Justice Secretary in place.
How easy would it be for him to pick up where Jack Straw left off and ignore the wishes of the Conservatives’ friends in Fleet Street?
The Shadow Justice Secretary since January 2009 has been Dominic Grieve. His relationship with News International is unclear. A rumour surfaced in the Observer last year that News International boss, Rebekah Brooks told her old chum and the Tories’ Director of Communications, Andy Coulson that they wouldn’t support the Tories unless Grieve was replaced as Home Secretary. “There is little doubt that the Sun’s support will give Murdoch leverage over a Conservative government, and that power is already being used,” the Observer added. This is a fuzzy story, since Grieve left the Shadow Home Office job in January ’09 when he became Shadow Justice Secretary, and Rebekah Brooks wasn’t elevated to her job as CEO of News International until September ’09 – unless, of course, Rebekah and the Tories had been pow-wowing for over 9 months before the deal was done.
However, there is clearly some lack of harmony between NI and the potential new Justice Secretary. In response to my enquiry as to whether, if he is the New Justice Secretary after May 6th, he would continue the consultation process over Clause 77 or abandon it, he said: “We agree with the Information Commissioner that custodial penalties should be available for deliberate or reckless misuse of personal data. The law provides the possibility of a defence for responsible journalism undertaken in the public interest and the Information Commissioner has advised that this defence should be made available.”
It looks as though under a new Tory government, there is at least one piece of the News International agenda that won’t be adhered to, if Grieve is given the Justice Department – in spite of the Murdoch’s wishes.
Popularity: 6% [?]
Rupert’s Tentacles in Number Ten
On May 6th I’ll be voting for my incumbent MP, because he has been consistently hard-working within the constituency since he was elected in 2005; because if his party wins, he would be a constructive and commercially experienced treasury minister; because he was untainted by the expenses fiasco and because he is manifestly the best candidate in this election to represent our constituency.
Phillip Dunne is a Tory and I am glad to give him my support.
I am less glad to be promoting the interest and influence of the Murdoch family, and the presence of a Murdoch placeman in a Tory-held No.10.
Most conservative MPs would deny that the electorate cares much about this aspect of a potential Tory government – which underestimates the discerning, as yet uncommitted voter, for the efficacy of the Tory Murdoch-hugging strategy is proving highly questionable now that the days of winning elections in partnership with the Sun newspaper are long past; indeed the whole Murdoch/Tory love-in threatens to neuter the party’s earlier electoral strength
Perhaps old Rupert Rumplechops has been playing a double-bluff when he’s claimed to favour Brown (a most implausible coupling), aware that overt Murdoch support might jeopardise the Tories’ chance of victory.
The old boy is by no means too vain to be that subtle.
Popularity: 4% [?]
Screws raiding the Bins again.
The News of the Screws, in their campaign to insert former editor, Andy Coulson into the press office at Downing Street, last Sunday ran page after page of noisy headlines and knocking copy on Mr Brown and Nick ‘Wunderkind’ Clegg. They put the boot into leading LibDem, St Vince Cable, too, the only MP to predict the crash of ’08.
No expense was spared in their search for documents that might damage him. They’d gathered a pile of detail about Vince’s bills from power, water and phone service providers. In a fatuous attempt to show Cable’s incompetence, they listed details of late payment charges and final demands for bills which had all been paid.
They suggest that all this information is visible in his parliamentary expenses claims, but it isn’t. They must have acquired it by some other underhand means, using, perhaps, old fashioned binologists – investigators who rummage through dustbins for discarded letters; or blaggers who get the information directly from the companies’ own data records, which is a crime that may soon be punishable by a custodial sentence.
Popularity: 4% [?]
DAMAZER’S RADIO 4 LEGACY
Damazer’s reign at Radio 4 nicely embodied the BBC’s burgeoning arrogance and vanity – imposing on its listeners and viewers rather than seeking their views or wishes. No one, for example, asked for the UK Theme to be removed from the early morning R4 schedule (and many vocally pleaded for it to be retained). But Damazer didn’t like it, so it went.
More significantly, though, no one was clammering, or even suggesting that Ed Stourton wasn’t up to the job and should be taken off the highly important Today programme. But Damazer had decided there was something about Stourton he didn’t like, and a lot of listeners were even more pissed off when his own pet project, the bland, stuttering, fluffing and just plain dim Justin Webb replaced him.
Will Damazer’s successor listen to the listeners? I doubt it – not if she/he’s been brought up by the BBC.
Popularity: 4% [?]
Felix’s New European Order

slip of the prong
Felix Denis’s The Week – right tilting news digest for Sloane households who can’t be bothered to read the long boring bits in real newspapers evidently has some young trainees on the staff who don’t know their Bucharest from the Budapest (or their Hungary from their Romania), or have their bosses decided on a New European order?
Popularity: 5% [?]
