Ian Hislop’s right: Murdoch’s cosy relationship with Tories should be investigated
October 28, 2016 12.18pm BST
Cardiff University provides funding as a founding partner of The Conversation UK.
The reciprocal closeness in the relationship between journalism and power is a prominent feature of British political history. In times of war or national crisis, media organisations are expected more often than not to behave as if they were an
arm of government – but, for the newspapers of Rupert Murdoch, this close relationship seems to have become business as usual, whoever is living in Number 10 . And the willingness of various governments to yield to Rupert Murdoch’s news empire has been exhaustively documented.
We know by the media mogul’s own admission that he often entered Downing Street “
by the back door” and, as journalist
Anthony Hiltonnoted in February of this year:
I once asked Rupert Murdoch why he was so opposed to the European Union. “That’s easy,” he replied. “When I go into Downing Street they do what I say; when I go to Brussels they take no notice.”
It is increasingly clear that the influence of
News UK (the rebranded News International whose titles include the Sun, the Sun on Sunday, The Times and the Sunday Times) has not diminished in the aftermath of the
Leveson Inquiry or the phone-hacking scandals. Far from it. When Theresa May visited New York in late September (mere months after becoming prime minister) she found time in her hectic 36-hour schedule to meet with Murdoch.
Perhaps, as
The Guardian hinted, the previously media reticent May was just performing a realpolitik quid pro quo because in the Conservative leadership battle
The Sun had backed her and Michael Gove – instead of, as had been expected, prioritising Gove as a former News employee. The
Sun’s leader of July 6 stated:
The final choice for who will be our next prime minister must be between Theresa May and Michael Gove.
The Eye has it
So what happened to Michael Gove after his personal leadership debacle? He’s (back) working for the Times. Let’s not forget that at the Leveson Inquiry, Gove
described his boss as “one of the most significant figures of the last 50 years” a “force of nature, a phenomenon and a great man”.
The fact that Gove has returned so quickly to a position at the Times has irked the editor of Private Eye, Ian Hislop. Hislop recently told the Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee that Gove’s reappointment
should be investigated because of his past closeness to Murdoch while in government. There was the possibility, posited Hislop, that the relationship may have influenced political decisions. ...
https://theconversation.com/ian-his...ship-with-tories-should-be-investigated-67864