|
The police have steered the media off course
on several major stories, including Madeleine McCann, Joanna
Yeates and phone-hacking. Photograph: Ronald Grant Archive |
School's back! Or rather, Lord Justice Leveson and his fine collection
of silks are back from their between-module break. After roughing up the
press in general, we're now promised particular attention to what goes
wrong when coppers and hacks consort. And yet, already, you can sense a
certain ennui in high political places as this four-ring legal circus
grinds on.
Take one example. Michael Gove, the education secretary, warned the
other day against the clear danger that "we may see judges, celebrities
and the establishment … imposing either soft or hard regulation on what
should be the maximum of freedom of expression and the maximum of
freedom of speech". Well, he used to be a columnist on the Times and he
still reveres Rupert, critics say. No great surprises there, then?
Except that, among many other things, Gove is a very influential member
of the government and notably close to David Cameron. He speaks out
clearly enough, but never off-message. And there is, indeed, some
anxiety about the rather bewildering kid-gloves-and-iron-fist strategy
of module one, featuring every real or alleged press bungle of the last
20 years in no particular order.
Will that scattergun approach still be there in the second phase?
Consider… We know who revealed the name of Chris Jefferies, the teacher
arrested then cleared of killing Joanna Yeates: the police. We know who
quietly briefed reporters: the police. We know who misled journalists
covering the Madeleine McCann disappearance: the Portuguese police. We
know who told the Press Complaints Commission that phone hacking was
much overblown: the police.
The police, as some of them admit, have a lot to answer for. Nor should
we be served up too much about temptation and bribery – as though this
consisted only of evil journalists traducing the forces of rectitude.
For consider the only modus operandi that makes sense. Surely you don't
just wander down to your local policeman's pub waving brown envelopes?
That would be an insane risk.
No: you wait until Inspector Bung starts dropping hints. You wait until
you're offered something worth paying for, open palm extended. The
inspector moves; you dutifully shake out a bundle of fivers. And nobody
intrinsically doubts who's corrupting who. |