23
   

Is this the beginning of the end of Rupert Murdoch's media empire?

 
 
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Jul, 2011 11:13 am
@cicerone imposter,
From todays Guardian. This thing keeps biting Cameron on the arse.

Quote:
Ed Llewellyn, David Cameron's chief of staff, has found himself in the spotlight over phone hacking for the second time in a week after No 10 announced that he had been present at a Scotland Yard dinner attended by Neil Wallis, the former deputy editor of the News of the World.

Llewellyn and Andy Coulson, then communications director at No 10, attended a dinner hosted by Sir Paul Stephenson when he was Metropolitan police commissioner on 17 June last year.

Wallis, once Coulson's deputy at the News of the World, had been hired as a media adviser by the Met and was present at the dinner. Earlier this month Wallis was arrested by the Met as part of Operation Weeting, the main investigation into allegations of phone hacking.

Downing Street sources played down the significance of the dinner. Last week Llewellyn was forced to release emails to show that, last September, he rebuffed an offer from the outgoing Met assistant commissioner, John Yates, to discuss the phone-hacking scandal. Yates made the offer after an article in the New York Times put new pressure on Coulson.

A No 10 source said on Tuesday night: "Ed was late for the dinner because he was dealing with an urgent party matter that night. He was in and out of the dinner as he took calls. Is it odd for the prime minister's chief of staff to meet the Met commissioner? No, it is not."

But Labour, which was informed of the dinner in a letter to the frontbencher Kevin Brennan, is likely to ask questions about Llewellyn's decision to meet the Met commissioner in the company of Wallis at a time when questions were being asked about the links between the Yard and News International. One No 10 source said: "The first Ed remembered of the dinner was when he saw Neil Wallis's picture on television."

The disclosure of the Yard dinner came as the Cabinet Office released information showing that George Osborne has held 16 meetings with News International executives since the election and Michael Gove has met Rupert Murdoch six times. Ministers' contacts with News International executives continued until recent weeks after police had arrested senior News of the World journalists.

Osborne met Rebekah Brooks on five occasions in the year following the 2010 general election. The chancellor met James Murdoch on four occasions and Rupert Murdoch twice. In total, he attended 16 meetings at which News International executives were present.

Gove, a former senior Times journalist, met Rupert Murdoch on three occasions between 19 May and 26 June this year. A dinner on 26 June came just 10 days after Gove met Murdoch for dinner on 16 June. A spokesman for the education secretary said: "Michael worked for the BBC and News International, and his wife works for News International now. He's known Rupert Murdoch for over a decade. He did not discuss the BSkyB deal with the Murdochs and isn't at all embarrassed about his meetings, most of which have been about education, which is his job."

Jeremy Hunt, the culture secretary, met James Murdoch on two occasions in January this year to discuss the News Corp bid to take full control of BSkyB. Hunt was handed control of media takeovers in December after Vince Cable was stripped of his powers in the wake of the disclosure of a recording in which he told undercover journalists that he had "declared war" on Murdoch. The culture department has already published details of the meetings. In the first meeting Hunt told Murdoch that he had a duty to inform him that he had received the Ofcom report on the BSkyB bid. Hunt told Murdoch he had the right to reply. In the second meeting Hunt told Murdoch that he was minded to refer the bid to the Competition Commission, though he would consider any undertakings from News Corp.

Osborne's News International charm offensive, following his appointment as shadow chancellor by Michael Howard in 2005, paid off when the Conservatives came to power as part of the coalition. Osborne, who became particularly close to James Murdoch because they have children of a similar age, first met him after the election at a meeting also attended by Brooks. Murdoch and Brooks had another joint meeting in April this year.

Osborne met Rupert Murdoch in May last year, the first of two meetings during the year. They also met for dinner in New York on 17 December last year, four days before Cable was stripped of his responsibility for media takeovers. The chancellor invited Elisabeth Murdoch, the tycoon's daughter, and James Harding, the editor of the Times who was a few years above Osborne at St Paul's School, to his 40th birthday party at Dorneywood last month.

A Treasury source said that Osborne did not discuss the BSkyB bid with any of the News International executives after making clear shortly after the election that Cable was in charge of media takeovers. A Treasury spokesman said: "Early on in the process George explained this was a matter for Vince Cable alone and he could not get involved. It was not raised at any other discussion." A source said that Osborne has no recollection of having discussed phone hacking with the executives.

Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, told LBC News: "There have been shenanigans going on here, and until we know what actually was said in the meetings, the fact of the meetings doesn't prove it one way or the other. It just does raise rather a lot of questions about whether politics was being played over commercially sensitive matters like this."

The Yard dinner is likely to raise questions for Stephenson, who played down the significance of Wallis when he appeared before MPs last week after his resignation as commissioner. He told the home affairs select committee: "Mr Wallis was never employed to be my personal assistant or to provide personal advice to me ... He had a very part-time, minor role."
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Jul, 2011 05:55 pm
@izzythepush,
Quote:
Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, told LBC News: "There have been shenanigans going on here, and until we know what actually was said in the meetings, the fact of the meetings doesn't prove it one way or the other. It just does raise rather a lot of questions about whether politics was being played over commercially sensitive matters like this."

Well you've gotta admit, Mr Balls, it does all sound rather fishy! Wink

You have no idea how familiar this sounds, izzy.
It's deja vu, except in another country.
I hope the details of all those dinner conversations make Guardian headlines soon!
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Jul, 2011 08:14 pm
@msolga,
This is the place I come to catch up. The whole Murdoch thing has drifted off the Canadian radar - you can find updates on some Cdn media websites but it's no longer front page news here.
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Jul, 2011 08:30 pm
@ehBeth,
Yes, I think it reached saturation point here (in Oz), too, ehBeth, after the parliamentary hearing in Britain.
The major focus here now is the debate as to whether there should be an inquiry into the media or not .... which the Greens have called for & the Labor government supports.
(Remember Murdoch owns 70% of Oz newspapers & is hoping to replace the ABC as the main television provider to Asia. Temprarily stymied by the government.

http://m.smh.com.au/business/media-and-marketing/late-rule-change-undercuts-bid-for-national-tv-service-20110703-1gxfy.html )

izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 03:27 am
@msolga,
It's in the Guardian, but there's not so much of a focus on the telly, although Channel 4 did broadcast a brilliant documentary last night. The main interviewee was the whistleblower who was found dead recently. It's quite sad to see how Murdoch's empire not only ruined the lives of so many people, it corrupted it's own reporters. The amount of coke this guy had to do, to stay close to the celebs he was reporting on, was unbelievable.

Another note is that the NOTW is finding it really hard to give the profits from the sale of the last issue away. Lots of charities are refusing to take it. Mostly down to disgust at the way servicemen's phones were hacked.
hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 03:30 am
@izzythepush,
Quote:
Another note is that the NOTW is finding it really hard to give the profits from the sale of the last issue away. Lots of charities are refusing to take it. Mostly down to disgust at the way servicemen's phones were hacked
Are you seriously claiming that Murdoch may not be able to give away money?? You dont know much about how the world works, do you.......
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 03:33 am
@hawkeye10,
**** off **** for brains. The money has been given away, but not to the service charities NOTW said would be the beneficiaries. Maybe you should turn in, you're talking bollocks again.
hawkeye10
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 03:35 am
@izzythepush,
izzythepush wrote:

**** off **** for brains. The money has been given away, but not to the service charities NOTW said would be the beneficiaries. Maybe you should turn in, you're talking bollocks again.
Oh, so you lied when you wrote "is finding"....good to know.
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 04:18 am
@hawkeye10,
Think what you want. They could not give the money away to the charities they originally intended to benefit. Maybe I should have said found instead of finding. If you focus on splitting hairs and minutiae, you can avoid discussing the real issues.
hawkeye10
 
  0  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 04:33 am
@izzythepush,
Quote:
If you focus on splitting hairs and minutiae, you can avoid discussing the real issues.
Says the person who is trying to claim that Murdoch or anyone else gives a tinkers damn that the money did not go where someone thought that it might. Almost everyone had already pulled their ads, we are talking about a very small amount of money here, the refusal of it by some organizations was just as much for show as was Murdoch giving it away in the first place.
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 04:40 am
@hawkeye10,
hawkeye10 wrote:

Almost everyone had already pulled their ads, we are talking about a very small amount of money here,


3 million pounds is a small amount of money is it? I guess it's your round then.
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 04:57 am
@izzythepush,
I'd be interested to know which companies advertised in the last issue.
I thought just about all the regular advertisers had pulled out.
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 05:11 am
@msolga,
I hope I haven't asked too difficult a question, Izzy.
Don't worry if you don't know who the advertisers were.
Rather bad form of them to have done it, though!
electronicmail
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 05:30 am
@msolga,
Here you go
http://www.adweek.com/news/press/news-world-sees-record-sales-final-issue-133296

google does wonders
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 05:32 am
@msolga,
I don't read theNOTW, and I certainly did not buy the last issue, so I'm sorry I can't help you there, however, here is the article from yesterday's Guardian about giving away NOTW profits to charity.

Defence charities have snubbed the opportunity to make £1m each from the proceeds of the last edition of the News of the World because they were so repulsed by the alleged hacking of dead soldiers' families' phones by the paper.

The former defence correspondent of the News of the World has told how he had to make as many as "50 phone calls" to good causes before he could find three that would accept a share of the near £3m profits from the sale of the paper.

"I had to beg. All the charities said something along the lines of: "Paul, we're grateful for everything you have helped us with over the past two years, but we can't. There are family members of dead servicemen on our board, and they will not accept News of the World money," Paul McNamara wrote in the New York Times.

In the end the paper found three willing takers - Barnado's, the Forces Children's Trust and military projects at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham Charity. "During my time with the paper, I had developed close ties with many charities, especially those dealing with the armed forces. Because of this, I was tasked with giving away the profits we made from the sales of our final edition.

"I'd never pondered what it would be like to divvy up more than $4.5m before, but had someone asked, I would have assumed it easy," said McNamara.

One News International source said they had dozens of calls from a wide variety of charities looking to see how they could benefit from the donations from the final sale, though they did not deny that defence charities had rebuffed the offers. The fallout from the phone-hacking scandal is affecting other newspaper titles following claims, which have been denied, that the illegal practice also took place at the Daily Mirror.

Publisher Trinity Mirror has announced a six-week review of its editorial controls and procedures across all its national and regional titles including the Mirror, the Sunday Mirror, the People and the Daily Record, led by group legal director Paul Vickers. Trinity Mirror's share price fell 9.8% on Monday amid investor concerns that the hacking scandal may not be restricted to only News International.

Former Daily Mirror reporter James Hipwell has reiterated his claims that hacking was widespread at other newspapers, including the Mirror. A separate report on BBC2's Newsnight alleged the use of phone hacking and private detectives was widespread at the Sunday Mirror. Trinity Mirror described both sets of allegations as "unsubstantiated", saying its journalists "work within the criminal law and the Press Complaints Commission code of conduct". Sources at the company indicated it was a "review rather than an investigation" into the company's editorial controls and procedures and was a response to general concern about newspaper practices rather than to specific phone-hacking allegations.

The Sunday Mirror is in pole position to improve its commercial position significantly following the closure of its arch-rival and will want to close down any association with the phone-hacking scandal as swiftly as possible.

The paper's circulation is now double what it was before the News of the World shut. It sold more than 2m copies last Sunday for the first time in more than a decade.

Although it was a big news day on Sunday with the Norway massacre and the death of Amy Winehouse the day before, it is a huge opportunity for Trinity Mirror which also saw sales of the People almost double.
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 05:36 am
@electronicmail,
Ah, so some charities took advantage of the offer of free advertising space.

Thank you, electronicmail.
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 05:48 am
@izzythepush,
Very interesting.
Imagine having to beg charities to take the money.
I can fully appreciate why so many others wouldn't. Particularly the defence charities.

Thanks, Izzy.


izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 05:50 am
@msolga,
Unfortunately, the online article is considerably shorter than the printed version. It's got all the main points in it though.
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 11:02 am
@izzythepush,
Just been announced on the BBC. A new low for Murdoch.

The mother of murder victim Sarah Payne has been told she may have been the victim of phone hacking, her charity has said.

Police told Sara Payne her details were in notes compiled by private detective Glenn Mulcaire, who was used by the News of the World, which championed her Sarah's Law child protection campaign.

The Phoenix Chief Advocates charity says Ms Payne is "devastated".

The paper's owner News International has not yet responded to the claims.

According to a a report in the Guardian, the evidence uncovered by police in Mulcaire's notes is believed to relate to a phone given to Ms Payne by the NoW's then editor-Rebekah Brooks "as a gift to help her stay in touch with her supporters".

The BBC has not been able to confirm whether the evidence does relate to this particular mobile.

But Mrs Brooks, who left her role as News International chief executive in the wake of the hacking scandal but denies having had any knowledge of the practice while at the paper, says the phone "was not a personal gift".

In a statement, she said: "These allegations are abhorrent and particularly upsetting as Sara Payne is dear friend.

"For the benefit of the campaign for Sarah's Law, the News of the World have provided Sara with a mobile telephone for the last 11 years...

"The idea that anyone on the newspaper knew that Sara or the campaign team were targeted by Mr Mulcaire is unthinkable. The idea of her being targeted is beyond my comprehension.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote
Sara is absolutely devastated by this news, we're all deeply disappointed and are just working to get her through it”
End Quote
Phoenix Chief Advocates charity
"It is imperative for Sara and the other victims of crime that these allegations are investigated and those culpable brought to justice."

The Metropolitan Police's Operation Weeting is investigating claims of phone-hacking at the paper, which was shut down earlier this month after it emerged that the phone of murder victim Milly Dowler had been hacked while the Surrey schoolgirl was still missing.

Ms Payne had previously said she had not been told she was a potential victim of phone hacking.

But in a statement, the Phoenix Chief Advocates charity said: "Whilst it was previously confirmed by 'Operation Weeting' that Sara Payne's name was not on Private Investigator 'Glenn Mulcaire' list, it has now been confirmed by the 'Operation Weeting' that Sara's details are on his list.

"Sara is absolutely devastated by this news, we're all deeply disappointed and are just working to get her through it.

"Sara will continue to work with the proper authorities regarding this matter, there will be a further statement in due course, but at this point in time, she (or we) can make no further comment."

Committee hearing

Ms Payne became a campaigner for the right of parents to know if paedophiles were living in their area after her eight-year-old daughter Sarah was murdered by paedophile Roy Whiting in Pulborough, West Sussex, in 2000.

The NoW championed her campaign for the introduction of so-called Sarah's Law.


Ms Payne started her campaign after her daughter Sarah was murdered in 2000 In the final edition of the NoW on 10 July, Ms Payne wrote a farewell column for the paper, describing its staff as "my good and trusted friends".

Therese Coffey MP, a member of the culture, media and sport committee, said: "This is another dark chapter in this ongoing saga and I can't imagine the stress Mrs Payne is going through right now."

The committee has heard evidence from Mrs Brooks, NI chairman James Murdoch, and Rupert Murdoch, chairman of parent company News Corporation, all of whom denied knowing about the extent of the phone-hacking allegations at the paper until late 2010.

She said the MPs were meeting on Friday and could choose to reopen its inquiry, calling further witnesses, she added.

Meanwhile, the judge leading the public inquiry into phone-hacking says he will use his powers to demand evidence from witnesses "as soon as possible".

Lord Justice Leveson said he would also invite all editors, journalists and media owners to flag up what they saw as "inappropriate" practices.
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Jul, 2011 11:33 am
@izzythepush,
From the Sun's report (Published: 08 Jul 2011) Sara Payne pays tribute to axed News of the World:
Quote:
[...]
"The NOTW team supported me through some of the darkest, most difficult times of my life and became my trusted friends.
"One example of their support was to give me a phone to help me stay in touch with my family, friends and support network, which turned out to be an absolute lifeline.
[...]
"Finally, since the shocking and disgusting Milly phone hacking revelations, there has been a great deal of speculation in the media and in Parliament that I or members of my Phoenix team may have been hacked too.
"This would be a devastating intolerable betrayal and we would be absolutely horrified if this turns out to be true.
"As a result of this speculation, we have been overwhelmed by press enquiries, so, just to clarify.
"Neither myself, my sister Fiona or my co-chief Shy Keenan have ever been approached by the police or shown any evidence that our phones have been hacked, we had assumed that they would have contacted us immediately if we were on the list.
"In order to put an end to this speculation, we have asked Operation Weeting to confirm if our names are on the phone hackers' list and if they have any evidence that our phones were hacked and we are awaiting their response.
"Once we know the facts of the matter, we will take the appropriate action and update you all when we are able, until then we can make no further comment."

 

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