Christmas with the Murdochs... and the great offices of state

So This is how it REALLY
Works.... Over Christmas...
Good to see superstar sociologist C Wright Mills cited here :-)

A family that plays together stays together: a happy holiday season for the 
UK’s political-media elite
DES FREEDMAN 23 December 2015
Murdoch, Cameron, Osborne, Brooks - all the old gang met up for a heartwarming 
Christmas get together.

https://www.opendemocracy.net/uk/des-freedman/family-that-plays-together-stays-together-happy-holiday-season-for-uk-s-political-meFlickr/david_shankbone,
 CC BY 2.0

Families should be together at Christmas. That’s the simple message we should 
take from the merry noises emanating from Rupert Murdoch’s London apartment 
where, on Monday night, David Cameron, George Osborne, Rebekah Brooks and a 
slew of top News Corp personnel joined the mogul in capping off what has been a 
pretty decent year for him. After all, this was the year in which authorities 
in both the UK and the US dropped all remaining charges against News Corp and 
in which Sky, effectively controlled by Murdoch, posted record profits of 
nearly £1.2 billion. Four years after his annus horriblis of 2011, Murdoch has 
felt confident enough to restore Brooks, the former Sun editor, to the centre 
of his UK newspaper operations, has seen his family’s wealth double and has 
seen his titles contribute to the return of David Cameron and the Tories to 
Downing Street. Phone hacking, it appears, is simply old news.

Monday’s soiree may have been a little colder outside but the political 
temperature remains similar to those parties in the summer of 2011 where the 
UK’s political and cultural elites gathered to soak up the hospitality of the 
Murdoch clan. First we had Rupert’s summer party where the prime minister and 
his wife joined then Labour leader Ed Miliband and the ‘great and the good’ of 
British journalism and politics in celebrating the influence of the great man. 
Two weeks later, we had the gathering hosted by Elisabeth Murdoch in her 
Oxfordshire home that was attended by an impressive range of government 
ministers, advisers, senior Labour politicians, journalists, musicians and PR 
gurus. Then three days after that event, the phone hacking scandal erupted.

Jane Martinson has written in the Guardian that the Christmas party was the 
‘culmination’ of Murdoch’s rehabilitation into British public life since his 
‘humbling’ at the hands of the culture select committee. Of course the fact is 
that Murdoch never fully retreated from the corridors of power. Research from 
the Media Reform Coalition showed that News Corp executives met with government 
officials ten times in the twelve months up to March 2015 and that Murdoch 
himself was present on eight of these occasions. We also now know that George 
Osborne met twice during the summer with Murdoch immediately before the 
former’s highly controversial decision to saddle the BBC with the costs of 
paying for free television licences for the over-75s – a decision that weakens 
the BBC and, therefore, strengthens the position of Sky. Perhaps it is not so 
much Murdoch that is being rehabilitated so much as the reputations of Cameron 
and Osborne in the eyes of
 Murdoch himself.

One man, however, was missing from last Monday’s festivities: Andy Coulson. The 
former News of the World editor and subsequently director of communications 
under David Cameron who was jailed in 2014 for his involvement in phone hacking 
was nowhere to be seen. Perhaps this is because he was too busy writing one of 
his columns for the Telegraph, the first of which drew on his time in Belmarsh 
Prison to make the case for a compulsory National Citizen Service in which 
young people give something back to community and country. Too bad for Coulson 
(and all the staff at the News of the World) that he didn’t learn the key 
lesson of the NCS early enough: that, in his own words, ‘you are less likely to 
damage or destroy something you played a part in building.’

Private Eye has since reported that the Telegraph has hired him not simply as a 
columnist but as a ‘strategic advisor’ to its chief executive Murdoch MacLennan 
for a £60,000 fee (a charge apparently denied by the Telegraph). Now you may 
well say that this is a worthy example of a commitment to rehabilitate even the 
most compromised jailbird and that the company is simply demonstrating its 
loyalty to a man it has long praised. After all, MacLennan actually provided a 
character reference for Coulson during the hacking trial arguing that ‘I have 
always found him to be extremely honest and reliable’ and praising his ‘huge 
achievements at the News of the World which is easy to forget’. His fellow 
columnist Matthew d’Ancona was a victim of phone hacking but nevertheless 
describes Coulson as ‘a man of great decency.’ That is the kind of loyalty that 
money alone can’t buy.

On the other hand, you could describe Coulson’s ‘normalisation’ as a scandalous 
rebuff to both the victims of phone hacking and to those many journalists who 
were not tempted to resort to criminal behaviour to secure a story. You might 
have expected the Telegraph to tread just a little carefully before exposing 
itself to yet more allegations of corrupt behaviour. This is the newspaper, 
after all, whose former chief political commentator, Peter Oborne, resigned 
over its reluctance to cover HSBC’s tax affairs in case it undermined the 
paper's commercial relationship with the bank. And you might think that the 
developing relationship between the Telegraph and Coulson is a ‘most sinister 
development’, to use Oborne’s phrase, in its demonstration of total 
indifference to the implications of hacking and unethical journalism.

So the nexus between political and media elites – or as the American 
sociologist C. Wright Mills called it in The Power Elite, the ‘interlocking 
directorate' – continues on its merry way into 2016. Murdoch will resume his 
monthly meetings with government and his titles will continue to attack anyone 
who stands in the way of a securitised and neoliberal Britain: Jeremy Corbyn, 
anti-war campaigners, refugees, benefit claimants and public service 
broadcasters. Every now and again, the Sun will overstep the mark and publish 
lies that force even the supine press regulator IPSO to demand a front page 
correction; but then the Sun’s quirky humour means that it will hide the 
correction in a corner under a picture of footballer Theo Walcott, safe in the 
knowledge that one of Murdoch’s most loyal lieutenants, former political editor 
Trevor Kavanagh, has just been promoted to the board of IPSO.

Murdoch, Cameron, Osborne, Brooks, MacLennan, Coulson, Kavanagh: this is the 
villainous cast list for a Christmas panto about vested interests in today’s 
Britain. Behind them stand the victims of phone hacking demanding a review of 
the CPS decision not to prosecute News Corp for corporate wrongdoing, the 
campaigners determined to press for Leveson Part 2 to examine the failure of 
the police to investigate phone hacking, and a Labour Party leadership that has 
now promised to challenge the concentration of media ownership that has 
contributed so much to the corrupt relations between political and media 
elites. Sadly, this corruption seems to be for life and not just for Christmas, 
unless we discover the resources and energy to tackle it.

 

Des Freedman tweets @lazebnic and his inaugural lecture, Be the Media, Know the 
Media, Change the Media, is at 5.30pm on Tuesday 19 January at Goldsmiths, 
University of London. Free tickets are available here.

 Our journalism is always free to read but not free to produce. If you enjoy 
our material and would like to contribute you can do so here.

-- 
-- 
Please consider seriously the reason why these elite institutions are not 
discussed in the mainstream press despite the immense financial and political 
power they wield? 
There are sick and evil occultists running the Western World. They are power 
mad lunatics like something from a kids cartoon with their fingers on the 
nuclear button! Armageddon is closer than you thought. Only God can save our 
souls from their clutches, at least that's my considered opinion - Tony

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