UK Parliamentary Select
Committee continues cover-up of Murdoch scandal
By Robert Stevens
and Chris Marsden
20 July 2011
The appearance of
Rupert Murdoch, the chairman and CEO of News
Corporation, and his son James Murdoch, its deputy
chief operating officer, before the British
Parliament’s Culture, Media and Sports Select
Committee was a piece of well-choreographed
political theatre.
As with Rebekah
Brooks, the former chief executive of News
International, News Corp’s UK arm, who was
questioned afterwards, the Murdochs knew beforehand
that there was no danger of them being asked probing
questions, let alone suffering any legal
consequences from their testimony.
Far from the much
vaunted reassertion of the authority of Parliament
and the bringing of Murdoch to account, the event
took on the character of a PR exercise for News
Corp.
One would never
have known by the committee’s deference that the
three News Corp luminaries were appearing to answer
questions relating not only to the News of the
World’s phone hacking, but to bribery,
corruption and blackmail of police officers, public
officials and leading politicians by Murdoch’s media
empire.
With each day, new
facts and allegations expose what former Prime
Minister Gordon Brown accurately described as a vast
criminal nexus. The contrast between such rampant
criminality and the kid gloves treatment of the
Murdochs was stark.
The tone had been
set that morning by Labour Party leader Ed Miliband,
who stated that the questioning of the News Corp
executives “has to be done in a calm and
level-headed way and I'm sure it will be on all
sides of the house, from MPs from all parties,
because the key thing here is to get to the truth.
It is not about a witch-hunt.”
His words echoed
those of the select committee’s chair, Conservative
MP John Whittingdale. Prior to yesterday’s event,
Whittingdale was revealed to be a friend of Brooks,
former News International Chairman Les Hinton, and
Rupert Murdoch’s daughter, Elisabeth Murdoch.
The unserious
nature of the proceedings was such that the two most
senior people involved in the most all-encompassing
scandal in British history, with major international
ramifications, were scheduled to appear and be
questioned for all of one hour. As it turned out,
the questioning took three hours, but everything
else proceeded according to plan.
Murdoch’s first
gesture was to interrupt his son to declare with
obvious insincerity that today was “the most humble
day of his life.” As the proceedings wore on he
became less restrained in his arrogance.
News Corp
“tolerates no wrongdoing,” he contemptuously told
the panel. He bore no personal responsibility and
had no knowledge of what had happened at a newspaper
that made up just one per cent of his company, he
added.
He had been
betrayed by “people I trusted… They betrayed the
company, and me, and they deserve to pay, and I
think that, frankly, I’m the best person to clean
this up.”
The default
response of the Murdochs and Brooks to the extremely
timid questioning was a blanket profession of
ignorance of any wrongdoing by their employees,
coupled with the occasional insistence that they
could not answer questions relating to an ongoing
criminal investigation.
Their testimony
did reveal that News International had contributed
to the hefty defence costs racked up by private
detective Glen Mulcaire, jailed in 2007 for hacking
members of the royal family. Mulcaire is thought to
be responsible as well for intercepting the mobile
phone of the young murder victim, Milly Dowler.
The hearing also
aired allegations that News International had
subsidised the pay of Andy Coulson after he resigned
as News of the World editor following the
jailing of Mulcaire and the newspaper’s royals
correspondent, Clive Goodman. Coulson went on to
work for Prime Minister David Cameron in opposition
and in government.
The select
committee hearing ended more successfully than the
Murdochs could have wished had they written the
script themselves. A puerile stunt by a professional
comedian, who pushed a shaving foam pie into Rupert
Murdoch’s face, ended with Murdoch’s wife Wendy
punching the attacker.
“Mr. Murdoch, your
wife has a very good left hook,” said Tom Watson,
the Labour MP who has played a central role in
exposing the hacking scandal, while Conservative MP
Louise Mensch thanked Murdoch profusely for agreeing
to continue.
Murdoch answered a
few more feeble questions before the session closed
with his reading of a self-serving statement.
The most prosaic
verdict on the proceedings was provided by the
financial markets. At one point, News Corp shares
rose by $1.07, or 7.1 percent, to $16.03. They
closed up 6 percent, or $2 billion. News Corp shares
had previously fallen by 17 percent since the
scandal broke.
Earlier in the
day, the Home Affairs Select Committee questioned
the former commissioner of the Metropolitan Police,
Sir Paul Stephenson, and the ex-assistant
commissioner, John Yates. Until their resignations
this week, these were the most senior police
officers in the UK. Both are heavily implicated in
the News of the World scandal. Yet, along
with Metropolitan Police spokesman Dick Fedorcio,
they were questioned separately and in the most
cursory fashion, the entire hearing lasting barely
an hour.
The testimony of
Stephenson did shed light on the intimate relations
between the Metropolitan Police and the political
establishment. He said he did not want to risk
“compromising” Prime Minister Cameron by disclosing
to him information related to the phone hacking
scandal.
This was in
connection with the fact that Neil Wallis, who was
the deputy editor of News of the World
under Coulson, when phone hacking took place on a
massive scale, was employed as an adviser to the
Metropolitan Police. In this capacity he had advised
Stephenson and Yates during a period when the
Metropolitan Police rejected calls for the reopening
of a criminal investigation into the interception of
voicemails and the bribing of police by News of
the World.
Stephenson said in
his testimony, “Actually, a senior official at No.
10 guided us that actually we should not compromise
the prime minister, and it seems to me to be
entirely sensible.”
Under questioning
about the case of Dave Cook, a police officer who
says he was a victim of News of the World
phone hacking while re-investigating a murder case,
Yates said he had a meeting at Scotland Yard with
Rebekah Brooks on the issue.
This evidence
points to the fundamental reason why the two select
committees are nothing more than a cover for the
refusal to conduct a serious investigation of the
News International scandal that would bring the
guilty to book. Murdoch, his son, and Brooks were
being quizzed by the representatives of parties that
are deeply and irretrievably embroiled in the
corrupt and criminal practices of News
International. That is why they were treated as
honoured guests, rather than those implicated in
high crimes.
It is why they
were not joined by Coulson, despite his editorship
covering a longer period than Brooks herself and the
years when most of the criminal activity so far
exposed in fact occurred.
It is why there
has been no suggestion that either former prime
minister Tony Blair or Cameron himself give
evidence--even though the network of criminal
activity revealed again and again finishes behind
the doors of Number 10 Downing Street.
Murdoch joked
about his numerous visits to Downing Street, via the
back door, to discuss over the years with
Conservative and Labour prime ministers alike,
saying, “I wish they’d leave me alone.”
The select
committee hearings held yesterday, and any other
inquiries that may be organised by Parliament, are a
fraud, designed to cover up not only the crimes of
the Murdoch empire, but the collusion and complicity
of the entire political establishment and all of the
official institutions of the state.
Today, Parliament
is to meet in an emergency session that has been
forced upon a reluctant Cameron so that he can take
questions on yesterday’s proceedings. MPs will then
break for the summer recess and will not return
until September 5.
If there was the
slightest commitment to revealing the truth of what
has happened, all leave would be cancelled and the
Murdochs and others would be questioned under oath
for criminal prosecutions. This is, after all, a
scandal that has implicated not merely News
International, but the major political parties, the
police, the civil service and the judiciary.
A central and
overriding lesson must be drawn. Parliament and its
parties are nothing more than the hirelings of an
obscenely wealthy oligarchy that has complete
liberty to pursue their self-enrichment and impose
their counterrevolutionary social agenda by whatever
means they see fit. Only the independent political
intervention of the working class, under the
leadership of its own socialist party, can put an
end to this reactionary and anti-democratic set-up.