Friday, 17 July 2026

Good Riddance

Peter Oborne cuts through the cant:

The most serious parliamentary misdemeanour that a minister can commit is to deceive MPs. / That is exactly what Keir Starmer did when he answered questions, for his last time as prime minister, on Wednesday.

Exploiting the occasion to justify his record, he told MPs that when he became UK Labour leader, “we had just lost the 2019 election, which nearly broke my party. It was the worst result since 1935, and we were found to be institutionally antisemitic.”

This statement contained a serious falsehood. Many would call it a lie.

Starmer’s predecessor, Jeremy Corbyn, swiftly issued a statement in response: “The prime minister today falsely claimed that Labour was found to be ‘institutionally antisemitic’ under my leadership. There was no such finding.”

It’s not difficult to guess why Starmer levied such a damaging - and false - allegation against Corbyn. He has been driven out of office by parliamentary colleagues who did not like or trust him, and who thought he was useless at his job. It has been a terrible humiliation.

It’s human, natural and entirely forgivable that Starmer should seek to boast of his achievements in office. But it’s despicable to justify those claims by making false insinuations about a former colleague. 

Ugly questions

Starmer repeated the falsehood on his trip to Kyiv on Thursday, telling Sky News that he wished to be remembered “as the person that saved the Labour Party, turned it into a party that could face the public again.” / He added: “We were a party that were found to be institutionally antisemitic, that was not fit to actually face the country and the electorate.”

A month ago, as part of his mission to restore his reputation by trashing Corbyn, he claimed that he had “inherited a Labour Party that was politically, financially and morally bankrupt”.

This was another fabrication. Corbyn’s Labour was nowhere near bankruptcy; in fact, the party’s 2020 annual report noted that the party had emerged from the 2019 election campaign “with our finances intact”.

Starmer, who served as a senior member of Corbyn’s shadow cabinet, must have known that his statement about Labour’s finances was false - but he made it anyway.

I have written two books about lying in British public life. One book, The Rise of Political Lying, focused on former Prime Minister Tony Blair and his deceitful inner circle. The second, The Assault on Truth, dealt with former Prime Minister Boris Johnson and the sordid coterie that surrounded him.

I don’t think Starmer was as serious a liar as Blair (remember weapons of mass destruction and the Iraq War) or as habitual an offender as Johnson. But ugly questions surround his personal integrity, especially his dealings with Corbyn.

Seven years ago, Starmer actually went on record dismissing claims that Labour was institutionally antisemitic. Now he’s saying the opposite. This kind of double dealing is typical of Starmer. / Back then, Starmer described Corbyn as a “friend” of his. Three years later, he insisted that Corbyn was “never a friend”.

Structural dishonesty

Consider, too, Starmer’s campaign for the Labour leadership at the start of 2020. He presented himself as a radical politician who would build on the best elements of the Corbyn era, end factionalism and unite the party.

In an interview with Jamie Driscoll, then Labour’s popular mayor for the North of Tyne region, he said: “If you’re going to go for unity, you’ve got to inspire people to come together. You can’t force them to come together. Disciplining people to be united is going nowhere.”

In his campaign launch, Starmer described the party’s 2017 manifesto as a benchmark and said: “We are not going to trash the last Labour government … nor are we going to trash the last four years.”

He presented the party membership with 10 policy “pledges”, which included a hike in taxes for higher earners and taking “rail, mail, energy and water” into public ownership. He went on to abandon almost all of these pledges.

It’s impossible to avoid the conclusion that in 2020, Starmer ran a leadership campaign that was deliberately dishonest. Needing to gain the support of Labour’s left-wing membership, he presented a pitch that was entirely at variance with the way he subsequently ran the party.

This structural dishonesty helps to explain why Starmer went on to be held in such contempt not just by Labour Party members, but also by so many British voters.

Twisting the truth

To sum up, Starmer rose to power by twisting and distorting the truth - and he leaves office in exactly the same fashion.

In October 2020, the UK government’s equalities watchdog published its investigation into antisemitism in the Labour Party. It found “specific examples of harassment, discrimination and political interference”, and said that Labour could have tackled antisemitism more effectively “if the leadership had chosen to do so”.

At no point did the report deem Labour under Corbyn to be “institutionally antisemitic”. That claim was made by Alan Johnson, a senior research fellow at the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre.

On Thursday, I approached Starmer’s media office with a question. I pointed out that the ministerial code, signed off on personally by Starmer, insists that “it is of paramount importance that ministers give accurate and truthful information to Parliament, correcting any inadvertent error at the earliest opportunity”.

I asked a media officer whether the prime minister would return to parliament to correct the record, as the ministerial code demands. The officer heard me out, then asked me to put my request in writing - so I did. No answer. I chased the office for a response. Still no answer.

After Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday, Starmer received a standing ovation from colleagues. He was widely praised for a dignified performance. Meanwhile, British journalists have been writing kind articles, saying what a decent man he was.

I can’t agree. Starmer is a fabricator and a fraud - a thoroughly nasty piece of work who has inflicted deep damage on the Labour Party and dishonoured British public life. Good riddance.

Not For Turning?

Andy Burnham is recanting his own record in office at Westminster by decrying Margaret Thatcher. But there was some improvement while he was in Manchester. That anyone using a bus after the age of 25 had failed in life was coined by Brian Howard, a poet who wrote for the New Statesman, since Tories may be better born, but Liberals are born better. It was popularised by Howard’s friend, Loelia, Duchess of Westminster. Yet even if Thatcher never said it, beyond doubt she thought it, as her successors in all parties have done ever since.

The only organisation that ever succeeded in getting rid of Thatcher was the Conservative Party. If it loved her in life as much as it loves in her death, then it had a very, very, very strange way of showing it. In her memoirs, the extremely bitter chapter on the Poll Tax makes it clear that she laboured under no delusion that she had been removed because of “Europe”. That was the cover story, but “Europe” had not been the reason why scores of Conservative MPs had been on course to lose their seats. The content, rather than the tone, of that policy did not change under her successor. By contrast, the Poll Tax was abolished completely, with a reversion in all but name to the previous system of domestic rates. The Conservatives then unexpectedly won the General Election of 1992, when Thatcher retired from the House of Commons.

Thatcher’s humble origins are greatly exaggerated. She was the daughter of a major local businessman and politician who ran most of the committees and charities for miles around. Even the people who love her can see why the people who hate her do so; they just do not agree. But why the people who love her do so is, in their own terms, a complete mystery. She gave Britain the Single European Act, the Anglo-Irish Agreement, the Exchange Rate Mechanism, the Police and Criminal Evidence Act, the Children Act, the replacement of O-levels with GCSEs, the destruction of the economic basis of paternal authority in the stockades of male employment, the massive increase in benefit dependency, the rise of Political Correctness, the general moral chaos of the 1980s, the legalisation of abortion up to birth for “severe fetal abnormality” that did not have to be specified, and that is just the start.

Thatcher’s only Commons defeat was when she tried to make Sunday just another shopping day. The basis of the lockdowns was the Public Health (Control of Disease) Act 1984. Who was the Prime Minister in 1984? For having publicly set fire to the Quran, Martin Frost and Hamit Coskun were both charged under section 5 of the Public Order Act 1986. Who was the Prime Minister in 1986? Three years later, Thatcher’s supporters wanted to use that provision against those who had publicly set fire to The Satanic Verses. The exemption of the kirpan from the ban on bladed articles in public places is one of the expressly intended effects of section 139 (5) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988. Thatcher’s replacement of household taxation with individual taxation made it impossible for most families to depend on a single income, thereby requiring that even tiny children be farmed out.

Thatcher knew about Cyril Smith when she arranged his knighthood. Jimmy Savile’s knighthood was rejected four times by the relevant committee, but she insisted upon it for the man with whom she spent every New Year’s Eve, and on whose programmes she was so obsessed with appearing that her staff had to ration those appearances. Her closest lieutenant was Peter Morrison. Smith was a highly eccentric and largely absentee MP for a tiny party, but he was a Thatcherite avant la lettre, who had left the Labour Party when he had started to see cars outside council houses. Thatcher’s father was a Liberal until that fell apart between the Wars, and never a member of the Conservative Party. He, she and Smith were politically indistinguishable.

That the Radical Right put out pamphlets demanding the legalisation of paedophile activity was mentioned in Our Friends in the North. That Thatcherite MPs were likely to commit sexual violence against boys with the full knowledge of the party hierarchy formed a subplot in To Play the King, the middle series of the original House of Cards trilogy. The Thatcher Government secured a judicial fiat that, without bothering to ask Parliament, abolished the age of consent altogether. Gillick competence ought instead to be called Thatcher competence. The Major Government did write Thatcher competence into the Age of Legal Capacity (Scotland) Act 1991. But it is applied in Northern Ireland on no apparent authority. Even in England and Wales, it has never been subject to a parliamentary vote. Let there be one now.

The stockades of working-class male employment were destroyed, and a new ruling elite of middle-class women funded and empowered by the State was created, by the politician who proclaimed the self-made man and the self-made woman, a proclamation of which the inexorable logic is gender self-identification. Just as Thatcher emerged in the Britain of everything from Danny La Rue and Dick Emery to David Bowie and The Rocky Horror Show, so a comparable figure, emerging in the Britain of the 2020s, would be assumed to be a transwoman. Thatcher has already been played by a drag queen at least once on British television, and specifically on Channel 4, which she created, meaning that one of her most abiding legacies is that Britain has two state broadcasters, one of which nevertheless carries advertisements. Thatcherism in a nutshell, as has always been clear from the output.

Was Thatcher “the Iron Lady” when, in early 1981, her initial pit closure programme was abandoned within two days of a walkout by the miners? Was she “the Iron Lady” when she had Nicholas Ridley negotiate a transfer of sovereignty over the Falkland Islands to Argentina, to be followed by a leaseback arrangement, until the Islanders, the Labour Party and Conservative backbenchers forced her to back down? Was she “the Iron Lady” when, within a few months of election on clear commitments with regard to Rhodesia, she simply abandoned them at the Commonwealth Conference in Lusaka? Was she “the Iron Lady” when, having claimed that Britain would never give up Hong Kong, she took barely 24 hours to return to Planet Earth by effecting a complete U-turn? Was she “the Iron Lady” when she took just as little time to move from public opposition to public support of Spanish accession to the Western European Union?

In the Budget of December 1976, Denis Healey and Jim Callaghan had delighted Thatcher by blindsiding the critics of monetarism on the Conservative benches, but was she “the Iron Lady” when she gave up monetarism completely during her second term? Thatcher’s continuous contact with the IRA, universally assumed at the time, has long since been confirmed. Four of the Hunger Strikers’ Five Demands were granted on 6 October 1981, and by 1983 even the right not to do prison work had been conceded. The Lady was as Iron about that as she was about most other things, namely not at all.

Thatcher was, though, true to her assurance in 1979 and in 1983 that, although until 1985 the Ulster Unionist Party remained affiliated to the National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations, there would be no return to office for Enoch Powell. But then, when told that Thatcher professed to have been influenced by his books on economics, Powell replied that, “She couldn’t have understood them, then.” He baffled her by telling her that he would have fought in the Second World War even if Britain had had a Communist Government. He would still have fought for his country. With no Tory roots, that was beyond her. With deep Liberal roots, she thought that wars were about “values”. That wider conversation was about what was then the recent Falklands War. While Powell had supported it on his own principles, Thatcher had seen it as an example of her dictum that, “If I send British troops abroad, it will be to defend our values.” Many years later, when asked her greatest achievement, she replied, “New Labour.” Quite. Thatcher has been named as her political heroine by Shabana Mahmood, who would issue us all with digital ID, and who would make people who had lived here for at least 10 years earn indefinite leave to remain by performing both paid and unpaid work to her satisfaction.

In 1981, Thatcher did impose an absolute ban on all government work for Andersen in view of its role in the DeLorean fraud, a ban that lasted until the General Election of 1997, when Patricia Hewitt was made Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, having only just entered Parliament from her position as Head of Research at Andersen Consulting. And in 1988, Thatcher and Nigel Lawson did correct the taxation of wealth at a lower rate than earnings until, in 1998, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown put the clock back to the Chancellor of the Exchequer who had gone on, as First Lord of the Treasury, to introduce monetarism to Britain and vice versa. But if those moves made Thatcher a better social democrat than New Labour, then their reversal made New Labour better Thatcherites than Thatcher or even Lawson.

The middle classes were transformed from people like Thatcher’s father into people like her son. She told us, and she really did, that “there is no such thing as society”, in which case there cannot be any such thing as the society that is the family, or the society that is the nation. Even more damagingly, and that is quite a feat, she endorsed the vugar illiteracy that the currency-issuing State had no money of its own, and could therefore “run out of other people’s money”. All in all, she turned Britain into the country that Marxists had always said that it was, even though before her, it never had been. Specifically, Thatcher sold off national assets at obscenely undervalued prices, while subjecting the rest of the public sector, fully 40 per cent of the British economy, to an unprecedented level of central dirigisme.

Thatcher continued public subsidies to private schools, to agriculture, to nuclear power, and to mortgage-holders. Without those public subsidies, the fourth would hardly have existed, and the other three, then as now, would not have existed at all. So much for “You can’t buck the market”. You can now, as you could then, and as she did then. The issue is not whether private schooling, agriculture, nuclear power, or mortgage-holding is a good or a bad thing in itself. The issue is whether “Thatcherism” was compatible with their continuation by means of “market-bucking” public subsidies. It simply was not, and is not.

Thatcher’s assault on council housing created the Housing Benefit racket, and it used the gigantic gifting of capital assets by the State to enable the beneficiaries to enter the property market ahead of private tenants, or of people still living at home, who in either case had saved for their deposits. What, exactly, was or is conservative or Tory about that? Or about moving in the characters from Shameless either alongside, or even in place of, the respectable working class?

It is thanks to Thatcher that the Conservatives have been the party of Net Zero for 40 years. Svante Arrhenius first theorised about anthropogenic global warming in 1896, and Thatcher was briefed about it by Sir Crispin Tickell, the then Deputy Under-Secretary of State for Economic Affairs at the Foreign Office. Thatcher always credited Tickell with having convinced her, leading to her speech on the subject to the Royal Society in 27 September 1988, the point at which the agenda of his 1977 Climatic Change and World Affairs entered the political mainstream. Tickell’s briefing of Thatcher was in 1984, tellingly the year that the Miners’ Strike began.

Thatcher began to blather on about environmentalism as a means of Socialist control once she had the dementia that also turned her into a born again Eurosceptic, but she was very Green indeed as Prime Minister, shocking first the Royal Society, and then the United Nations General Assembly, with her passion on the subject. By the time of her speech to the UN on 8 November 1989, she had made Tickell the British Ambassador to it, and the United Kingdom’s Permanent Representative on its Security Council. Boris Johnson described her destruction of the coal industry as “a big early start” towards Net Zero. Her milk-snatching is now held up as a pioneering strike against the wicked dairy industry, as I had been predicting for many years.

In 1979, Thatcher had not initially wanted to meet Menachem Begin in London, since her generation remembered what he was, and afterwards she expressed her regret at not having stuck to her guns. In 1980, she signed the Venice Declaration of nine European countries against Israeli settlements on the West Bank. In 1981, she denounced the Israeli bombing of Iraq’s Osirak nuclear reactor, calling it illegal. In 1982, she responded to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon by imposing an arms embargo on Israel that remained in force until 1994; when Begin wrote to ask her to reconsider, then she did not even reply. What says Melanie Phillips, in whose ideological odyssey that war looms large? In 1988, Thatcher expelled two Israeli diplomats and closed the London Mossad station when one of its double agents had been convicted of terrorism in Britain and when that station had been caught for a second time forging British passports, a practice that was to resurface, with similar but notably less severe consequences, in 2010; no Israeli diplomat had ever before been deported from a friendly state.

While all of that was to her credit, that would not be the view of her flamekeepers today, any more than they would approve of her attitude when visiting Kiev in June 1990, when she said that Britain would no more open an embassy in Ukraine than in California or Quebec. When the Soviet Union did collapse anyway, then she ludicrously pretended to have brought it down merely because she had happened to be in office at the time. But she did make a difference internationally where it was possible to do so, by providing aid and succour to Augusto Pinochet’s Chile and to apartheid South Africa, and by refusing to recognize either the Muzorewa-Smith Government or Joshua Nkomo, thereby paving the way for Robert Mugabe. Known as “the Peking Plotter”, she never saw a Maoist whom she did not like, from Mugabe, to Nicolae Ceaușescu, to Pol Pot. She even sent the SAS to train the Khmer Rouge, putting her in the same boat as Noam Chomsky, but making her worse, since he had no power to deploy Special Forces. Like every Prime Minister from Winston Churchill onwards, she knew the truth about the nuclear test veterans and the local indigenous peoples.

And it was Thatcher who issued what amounted to the open invitation to Argentina, armed by Begin’s Israel, to invade the Falkland Islands, followed by the starved Royal Navy’s having to behave as if the hopelessly out-of-her-depth Prime Minister did not exist, a sort of coup without which those Islands would be Argentine to this day. Until the eve of the invasion, Thatcher had been about to sell the ships that then had to be deployed. At a bargain basement price. To Argentina.

Some Chicken, Some Neck?

Andy Burnham’s self-denouncing denunciation of Margaret Thatcher has brought out the people who shriek that she was “the best Prime Minister since Churchill”. But unlike Thatcher, although like the American Old Right, when the British New Right was still new, than it had little or no time for Winston Churchill. Andrew Roberts devoted much of Eminent Churchillians to criticising Churchill’s Indian Summer Premiership of 1951 to 1955 as a period of betrayal on immigration and on relations with the trade unions, by a Government with scarcely a proper Tory in it, effectively a continuation of the Wartime Coalition. Rightly or wrongly, that was the view of the intellectual founders of the post-Thatcher Conservative Party.

In Great Contemporaries, published in 1937, two years after he had called Hitler’s achievements “among the most remarkable in the whole history of the world”, Churchill wrote that, “Those who have met Herr Hitler face to face in public business or on social terms have found a highly competent, cool, well-informed functionary with an agreeable manner, a disarming smile, and few have been unaffected by a subtle personal magnetism.” That passage was not removed from the book’s reprint in 1941. Great Contemporaries was reissued in 2024.

In May 1940, Churchill had been all ready to give Gibraltar, Malta, Suez, Somaliland, Kenya and Uganda to Mussolini, whom he had called “the greatest living legislator”. Gibraltar is still under British sovereignty only because Labour won the 1945 Election. After Franco had refused to let Hitler use Spain in order to invade Gibraltar and thus seize control of the Strait, Churchill had promised him Gibraltar once the War was safely won. That would have been just another colonial transfer in those days. But Churchill lost at the ballot box. In the meantime, over one thousand Spanish Republicans had fought the Second World War in the British Army. What do Churchill’s noisiest partisans think of that? It ranks with last September, when Konstantin Malofeev and Aleksandr Dugin played host to the Falange Española de las JONS, annual wreath-layers in memory of the Blue Legion.

So much for those who would use Churchill to make the case for continued support of the Ukraine of Svoboda, Pravy Sektor, the National Corps, C14, the Azov Brigade, the Aidar Battalion, the Donbas Battalion, the Dnipro-1 Battalion, the Dnipro-2 Battalion, the Kraken Regiment, and all the rest of them, including the Freedom of Russia Legion and the Russian Volunteer Corps. The Ukraine that in Ternopil  has named a football stadium after Roman Shukhevych, on a street named after Stepan Bandera. The Ukraine of Andriy Biletsky, to whom “the mission of Ukraine is to lead the White Races of the world in a final crusade for their survival against the Semite-led Untermenschen”. The Ukraine of Pavlo Lapshyn, who is still in His Majestys Prison, and who will be there for decades yet, because of his 2013 murder of 82-year-old Mohammed Saleem in Birmingham. Lapshyn went on to put bombs outside three mosques in this country. He belonged, and presumably still does belong, to the Wotanjugend, which is closely allied to the Azov Brigade, being led by its political ideologist, Alexey Levkin. In August 2020, Lapshyn pleaded guilty to a count of preparing an explosive substance in his cell.

All sorts of things about Churchill are simply ignored. Gallipoli. The miners. The Suffragettes. The refusal to bomb the railway lines to Auschwitz. His dishonest and self-serving memoirs. The truth about the catastrophic humiliation at Dunkirk. The other one, at Singapore, for which Australians and New Zealanders have never forgiven Britain. The Lancastria. The men left behind in France. Both the fact and the sheer scale of his 1945 defeat while the War with Japan was still going on, when Labour won half of his newly divided seat, and an Independent did very well in the other half after Labour and the Liberals had disgracefully refused to field candidates against him. His deselection by his local Conservative Association just before he died. And not least, his carve-up of Eastern Europe with Stalin, so very reminiscent of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. He borrowed the phrase “the Iron Curtain” from Goebbels and used it to mean exactly what Goebbels had meant by it. Broken by the War, the Soviet Union had neither the means nor the will to invade Western Europe, or the Red Army would have carried on marching in the summer of 1945. Still less was the USSR willing or able to cross either the Atlantic or the Pacific. Like every Prime Minister since, Churchill knew the truth about the nuclear test veterans and the indigenous peoples, lying to the House of Commons that only “some local rats” had been killed. Then again, in his own mind, was that a lie? Churchill’s role in the coup of 1953 makes him the last Briton who should ever be invoked in relation to Iran.

The electorate was under no illusions while Churchill was still alive. His image was booed and hissed when it appeared on newsreels. He led the Conservative Party into three General Elections, he lost the first two, and he only returned to office on the third occasion with the support of the National Liberals, having lost the popular vote. In the course of that Parliament, he had to be removed by his own party. It comfortably won the subsequent General Election. We have not forgotten the truth about him in the old mining areas. Nor have they in the places that he signed away to Stalin, including the country for whose freedom the War was fought. Churchill coined the nickname “Uncle Joe” for Stalin.

Churchill presided over the famine in Bengal. His views on race shocked his younger colleagues even in the Conservative Party of the 1950s. He wanted to transport the Jews to Palestine, since he saw them as not really British. Having deployed the Black and Tans to Ireland, he redeployed them to Palestine in that Zionist cause. The Zionists later expressed their gratitude by plotting to kill him and by murdering his friend, Lord Moyne, as well as sending letter-bombs to the White House of his ally, Harry S. Truman. In the meantime, they had contracted the Haavara Agreement, fought against Britain throughout the Second World War, allied with Fascist Italy, twice sought an alliance with Nazi Germany on the grounds that it was a lesser evil than Britain, hanged the boobytrapped bodies of Sergeants Clifford Martin and Mervyn Paice and photographed them, and bombed the King David Hotel. By contrast, before anyone brings him up, Haj Amin al-Husseini was holed up in Berlin with no practical influence in the Middle East, being instead a kind of mascot for the recruitment of Balkan, Caucasian and Central Asian Muslims into the predecessor organisations of those which now controlled Ukraine and of those for which the New Right campaigned during the collapse of Yugoslavia.

In such circles, the great cause of the moment is withdrawal from the European Convention on Human Rights. Yet in May 1948, when the pompously self-styled Congress of Europe assembled in the Hall of Knights in The Hague, then it was Churchill who dubbed “the Voice of Europe” that assembly of politicians who had recently been defeated at the polls, of the representatives of Royal and Noble Houses that had fairly recently been dispossessed at least in political terms, of the likes of Churchill who fell into both categories, and of people whose lives’ work was trying to delude themselves that so did they. In the name of the order that had held sway for a century between the defeat of Napoleon and the First World War, their aim was very explicitly to check the social democracy that was sweeping Western Europe at the time. The material that they produced had that intention, and it has had that effect. It was written into British domestic law by Tony Blair, whom Thatcher identified as her own greatest achievement.

The famous dipping of the cranes for Churchill’s coffin occurred only because the London dockers, who despised him, had been paid to do it. Churchill’s cult seems to have begun only once he was dead, or at least so old as to have been politically as good as dead. It never translated into votes. But it is equally true that once the Attlee Government had a record on which to be judged, then it was barely reelected in 1950, and although it did win the popular vote, it lost office in 1951. For 75 years and counting, the Labour Party has dined out on a mere six years that did not impress the electorate at the time. If Churchill and Clement Attlee were the twin giants of the Golden Age, then that was lost on the voters who lived through it. They did not think much of either of them.

And Now Heads Must Roll

Susie Boniface is magnificent:

This newspaper fought for the nuclear veterans for 40 years when others forgot their story.

This review, snuck out with callous cynicism as the nation watched the World Cup semi-final, is vindication of their testimony. And now heads must roll.

In 2018, Parliament was told the Ministry of Defence was “unable to locate any information” about blood testing of troops at nuclear weapon tests. It has now been forced to publish 315 pages of information it had all along, hidden behind state secrecy.

There is confirmation of another 50,000 files, owned by the MoD, which the MoD has not given itself permission to search. There may also be 5,339 veterans who were deliberately excluded from health studies.

Medical records were deliberately and unlawfully destroyed up to September last year, when the review was drawing to a close.Yet ministers were repeatedly briefed, and courts repeatedly told, there was no blood testing programme.

These are not small matters. Criminal allegations are under review by Thames Valley Police. Rightly so: this cover-up has cost thousands of service families their lives, their health, and their sanity.

In 1983, the legendary Paul Foot first reported in these pages of “The Curse of Christmas Island”. A few months later, our sister paper, the Sunday People, launched its investigation into the “Atom Bomb Kids” born with birth defects.

From that day to this, the British government has lied and denied what happened to the troops sent to Montebello, Emu Field, Maralinga and Christmas Island - and to the indigenous people who called those places home.

Winston Churchill told Parliament no-one was killed “apart from some local rats”. Anthony Eden, privately warned of the genetic hazards, said: “It’s a pity, but we cannot help it.” Margaret Thatcher said there were only 12,000 troops were involved, when the true figure now appears to be more than 26,000.

I have been the veterans’ champion for two decades, first winning the Nuclear Test Medal then uncovering the Nuked Blood Scandal. I repeatedly revealed human experiments, secret documents, and genetic research which proved the veterans’ case. Time and again, the MoD gave off-the-record briefings to other media denying it all.

To their unending shame, editors, reporters and defence specialists believed them. They never looked those veterans in the eye and hear what they had to say.

It was I who first approached Andy Burnham with a request to meet the veterans in 2021, and now the incoming Prime Minister has told campaigners he will begin work this summer on a special tribunal. We believe it is the only way to end the cover-up and gather evidence for prosecutions.

Through decades of trauma and grief, the veterans have shown nothing but courage. The MoD displayed nothing but cowardice. To the government, these brave servicemen were simply guinea pigs. To us, they were heroes.

Thursday, 16 July 2026

She Knew Full Well

At 3.08pm, Sir David Davis made use of parliamentary privilege:

Last month’s sentencing of Nicola Sturgeon’s husband exposed the real reasons behind the Scottish Government’s persecution of Alex Salmond. From 2010 to 2022, Peter Murrell abused his position to embezzle almost £500,000 from the SNP to buy luxury items. He used SNP money to buy a £33,000 Volkswagen Golf. Then he stole £57,000 to buy a Jaguar car. Further luxuries included handbags, an £850 gold pendant, four separate coffee machines costing £9,000, luxury kitchenware, at least 26 fountain pens costing nearly £21,000, and two £350 Dyson hairdryers—for a man with no hair. Really? Then, of course, there is the infamous £124,000 motorhome. Did Sturgeon not wonder where he got the money for all the vehicles, the kitchenware, the handbags, the pens, the pendant she loved? After all, who used the Dyson hairdryers in that household?

My view on Sturgeon’s denial is clear: she is lying. She knew full well what her husband was doing and how those luxury purchases were funded. That Murrell was a thief was obvious in the 1980s, when he stole from Alex Salmond. Salmond told Sturgeon it was deeply unwise to keep her husband on as chief executive, but she kept him in place, enabling his crimes for years. Eventually, in March 2021, three members of the SNP’s finance committee withdrew and resigned, blaming “chaotic” and “incompetent” financial management. In their own words, they were on the receiving end of a “hostile” backlash, driven by Sturgeon’s “toxic culture”. They resigned in protest and were later followed by the treasurer of the organisation. Sturgeon told colleagues at the meeting where those first resignations happened:

“There are no reasons for people to be concerned about the party’s finances”— 

no reasons. And when the treasurer resigned, she ignored it.

Sturgeon was part of a cover-up, using her position to suppress justice. She behaved dishonourably and dishonestly, but her most evil act was stitching up Alex Salmond to hide the truth. When he was considering going on the national executive himself, the risk to the conspirators was clear: here is a numerate man who could not be silenced. So what did they do? In Salmond’s own words, there was “a malicious and concerted” attempt to remove him from public life in Scotland by

“a range of individuals within the Scottish Government”.

Senior Scottish Government figures created a procedure for dealing with sexual harassment allegations that deliberately targeted Salmond. The procedure was so biased that a judge ruled it “unlawful” and “tainted by apparent bias”. Having lost that, senior figures brought prosecutions against him, but Salmond was acquitted on all charges by a majority female jury, before a female judge. It now appears clear that those actions, to destroy a man’s reputation and life, were motivated by a desire to hide their own crimes.

There are many unresolved questions. What happened with the £60,000-worth of items that were dropped from the indictment: the hair stylers, the lingerie and the books by Sturgeon’s favourite authors? Murrell was clearly protecting Sturgeon by removing items that incriminated her. In the investigation, the police had further questions for Sturgeon, but prosecutors stopped them from putting them. Those prosecutors worked for the Lord Advocate, the principal legal adviser to the Scottish Government—a clear conflict of interest.

There is a clear pattern of secrecy, obstruction and power used to protect power—a pattern started by Sturgeon. Scotland needs a fresh start. That starts with a judicial inquiry into this entire sordid scandal, because it is a scandal that cost Alex Salmond his life.

A Pope With Many Facets

Andrea Gagliarducci may have the best take that I have read:

Pope Leo XIV’s visit to the US ambassador’s residence to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the United States spoke volumes. It was also a clear sign of how much this pontificate has to say – and it’s much more than one might think. Speaking to Italian media, US Ambassador Brian Burch said the pope is frustrated by the fact that his actions are often interpreted purely politically, or worse, as in conflict with the US administration. It’s not that there aren’t any disagreements – even the ambassador hasn’t denied them – but in reality, not everything concerns Trump and the United States.

But this should also prompt broader reflection. Leo XIV doesn’t reason on “small” issues, but on broad lines. Pope Francis had a love for detail, and for symbolic positions that clearly showed which side the Pope was on. He demonstrated this, for example, with his “remediation cardinals,” the cardinals appointed to redress past situations in each of his nine consistories; or again, with his visit to the Russian embassy at the outbreak of the war in Ukraine. Seen in the proper light, his letter appointing then-Archbishop Fernández as prefect of the former Holy Office was another example, an act completely outside of protocol but aimed at constructing a precise narrative.

Leo XIV, on the other hand, doesn’t reason about reactions, much less specific reactions. Rather, he seeks to hold firm to principles and apply them in many ways, sometimes even pragmatically, but without ever deviating from the general idea or allowing it to degenerate into specific issues. Ambassador Burch’s story, therefore, does not just tell a detail, but allows us to understand how we can read the pontificate of Leo XIV. There are probably three criteria to consider.

The first criterion is that the pope does not speak in response to specific questions, and, in fact, he is very careful not to do so. The most striking example of this attitude is the Urbi et Orbi address last Easter. Such occasions, it bears mention, have always been used by popes to address the most pressing global issues. For many decades, it has been a geopolitical speech – often called the pope’s “State of the World Address” – and frequently has included many references to specific war situations.

Leo XIV, however, imposed a different style. His speech before the blessing Urbi et Orbi contained no direct references to conflict scenarios. He had specific requests for the world’s powerful, but didn’t going into the specifics of any region of the world. In short, the Pope has decided not to focus on details, but on principles. Therefore, his every message cannot be interpreted as a specific response to some political issue, especially with regard to the United States, since he is an American Pope.

In fact, that wasn’t his approach as the General of the Augustinians, and it certainly cannot be as Pope. Ambassador Burch also noted that the Pope feels deeply American but is keen to demonstrate that he is a pope for everyone, not just the United States. This is also the reason behind the pope’s decision not to return immediately to his homeland, but to first schedule a number of trips that demonstrate his concern for the entire world.

The second criterion is that of normality. This week marked the beginning of Leo XIV’s vacation, which he is spending in Castel Gandolfo, in the Apostolic Palace, which has remained partly a museum and partly a residence for the pope. The return to the Apostolic Palace of Castel Gandolfo, which probably also marks the end of the impromptu press gaggles, at least for a while, represents a return to papal normality of no small importance, together with Leo’s decision to live in the Apostolic Palace at the Vatican instead of the Domus Sanctae Marthae, which, Pope Francis had preferred.

Leo XIV is a Pope who is not afraid to look to tradition when that tradition is solid. He is not a Pope tied to the past, but a pope who does not disdain the symbols that come from the past, as demonstrated by his choice to wear the mozzetta from the beginning of his pontificate. The feeling is that the Pope wants to return to normality: liturgical normality, the normality of papal audiences, historical normality. Even the decision to convene a consistory for discussion at least once a year is a very clear signal of a search for normality and a return to the past.

Eventually, it will no longer be the Curia of the old days; it will be a Curia of the new, with new prefects. Leo XIV has recently appointed two prefects, and they are two women: Sister Alessandra Smerilli to head the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Development, and Montse Alvarado to head the Dicastery for Communication. These two appointments provide us with a third criterion for interpreting the pope: He cannot be labeled as either conservative or progressive.

That said, if this Pope seeks a return to normality, it doesn’t mean he won’t make progress or continue on the path laid out before him. The appointment of two women to head dicasteries demonstrates the pope’s innovative spirit, which ties in with the previous pontificate but also with tradition. Leo XIV is therefore not a pope who can easily be categorized. On many issues, he is making a healthy retreat. On others, he is continuing a work that had already begun with Pope Francis, despite all the controversies involved, starting with the inaccurate use of the title “pro-prefect.”

But reading Leo means, in a certain sense, looking at everything in the proper light, and that means changing perspective. He is a Pope with many facets, and that means he gives us much to ponder and leaves us with many things to understand.

The Dacre Dynasty

This is how to do it. Andy Beckett writes:

In 1986, 131 years after the Daily Telegraph was founded, its editor, Max Hastings, wrote a memo to senior colleagues about the newspaper’s nature and purpose. “The Daily Telegraph is … ‘nice’,” he said, “in the business of reassurance, of providing confirmation each morning for our readers that their world is looking pretty safe and stable.” He went on: “We are not a strident campaigning newspaper – our business each day is to seek to give our readers the fullest possible information about what is happening in the world, and to suggest what it might mean.”

In practice, under Hastings and many other Telegraph editors, this ethos produced a journalism of pervasive but usually understated conservatism: often focused on the English countryside, the value of hierarchy and tradition, the pleasures of seasonal pursuits such as foxhunting and gardening, the interests of farmers and retired military men – and cautionary tales about more reckless lives gone wrong, often presented through enjoyably detailed reports from the divorce courts. The Torygraph, as many non-readers called it, could be inward-looking and “numbingly dull”, says Geoffrey Wheatcroft, the historian of British conservatism, but it was “thoroughly respectable”. Many of its most renowned figures, such as Hastings’s predecessor as editor, Bill Deedes, were “mildness itself”.

Few people say such things about the Telegraph now. Against strong competition, it has become one of the angriest rightwing papers in the world. “Starmer’s Britain is descending into anarcho-tyranny,” claimed a typical columnist, Allister Heath, also editor of the Sunday Telegraph, last September. The same month, another columnist, Allison Pearson, praised the far-right agitator and convicted criminal Tommy Robinson for his “rough-diamond charisma”. Last December, the headline of a column by another regular contributor, Sean Thomas, read: “I prefer foreign autocracies to Labour’s Britain”.

The paper’s news coverage, once revered for its quirky stories and rich picture of Britain, has become increasingly partisan, polemical and hyperbolic. “Labour to unleash up to 12,000 shoplifters,” claimed a front-page headline in April, above a story about new laws on sentencing. Another April front page warned that “[Angela] Rayner’s workers’ rights police get power to force their way into offices”. In 2025, another front page was headlined: “One in 12 in London is illegal migrant.” After a complaint that the figure was based on an underestimate of the capital’s population and an artificially wide definition of “illegal migrant”, the paper was required by the press regulator Ipso to publish a correction.

A reporter who worked at the Telegraph from the 2010s until recently told me: “When I started, you would get handwritten letters from pensioners, telling you about their garden, about how they dealt with slugs. But as the paper changed, we got complaints from readers instead: ‘The Telegraph used to be so nice. Now it’s so angry.’” A former editor of the paper says: “My private view, like that of most sensible people, is that the paper is contemptible.” Like the many other conservative journalists interviewed for this article, he asked to remain anonymous.

The Telegraph’s hardening of tone and content since the mid-2010s has, to varying degrees, been echoed across the rightwing press. “Middle class will lose out as benefits claimants get energy help”, warned the front page of The Times on 25 March. “Up to 15 relatives enter UK for every care worker despite curbs,” said a recent story about migrants. On 8 January, another headline read: “Crime spree by Met police officers waved through in diversity push”. The story continued: “A diversity panel at Britain’s biggest police force overturned vetting refusals, which led to rogue officers and staff committing rapes, assaults and drug offences.”

That such ideologically framed stories often now appear in The Times, traditionally regarded as a calm and relatively objective paper of the centre-right, shows how much the conservative press has changed. The shift is also sometimes evident at the Sunday Times. Last November, its columnist Rod Liddle described London as “a rancid, alien, chaotic dystopia which preys upon a sullen, underpaid, third world workforce”. He is a controversialist, but his prominent pieces give a harder edge to a paper usually known for being relatively liberal and upbeat.

In fact, much of the rightwing press sounds more and more like its traditionally fiercest member, the Daily Mail, and often covers the same stories. Although the papers compete strongly with each other, in a political sense they can be mutually supportive. Last January, like the Telegraph, the Mail claimed that one in 12 Londoners were illegal migrants. When the Mail’s story was criticised by Ipso, too, the paper tried unsuccessfully to avoid printing a correction by arguing that its article was based on the Telegraph’s, and that “given the prominence of the original article, it was reasonable for it to assume the central premise was accurate”.

Why have Britain’s rightwing newspapers become more alike? Why have they become angrier and often more extreme in their stances? The rightwing press often warns about environmental campaigners, pro-Palestine activists or British Muslims becoming radicalised. But increasingly it seems that the rightwing press itself has been radicalised. This change has helped power the rise of Reform UK, push the Conservatives further to the right, and destroy Keir Starmer’s “pathetic” government, to use a favourite Telegraph adjective for it. All this has happened at a time when newspapers are supposed to be in terminal decline. How exactly has this radicalisation happened – and where is it leading the media and the country?

One of the main causes of this change may have been hiding in plain sight. The editor of the Daily Telegraph, the editor of The Times and the editor of the Sunday Times all spent formative years working at the Daily Mail. So did the Mail’s current editor, who has been at the paper since 1990.

All four are men, now in late middle age: Chris Evans, Tony Gallagher, Ben Taylor and Ted Verity. They worked at the Mail when the paper was enjoying a golden period, with print sales reaching a recent peak in 2003 of 2.5m. That measure of success is almost obsolete now, with digital media ascendant, but another key fact about the Mail in those days retains more contemporary relevance. The paper’s editor from 1992 to 2018, the four men’s dictatorial boss and inspiring mentor, was in many ways the inventor of modern culture-war journalism, and of the workplace practices that make its ceaseless production of outrage possible. He was one of the most revered and loathed editors in the history of British newspapers, the real victor last week in the phone-hacking case brought unsuccessfully against the Mail’s publisher by Prince Harry and six other prominent figures: Paul Dacre. (I contacted him and his four proteges for this article, as well as the papers they edit, which did not respond to my request for comment.)

“From virtually the moment I was born, I wanted to be an editor,” said Dacre, who is now 77, in a rare interview in 2008. “Not just wanted, if I’m honest. Hungered.” His father was a showbiz journalist for the Sunday Express for decades after the second world war. He would come home from work to their house in Arnos Grove, a neat and aspiring north London suburb, with scrawled notes from the Sunday Express’s editor, John Junor, on drafts of his articles. Junor was “the last of the great autocratic editors”, as Dacre self-effacingly put it later, when he was interviewed for Desert Island Discs, and there was a “rather gloomy atmosphere in the household” whenever Junor had written that one of his father’s articles was “rubbish”. Dacre learned young about the intoxicating directness of an editor’s power.

Gangly, shy and physically clumsy, he also realised that journalism could give him a public persona to hide behind, and a sense of control. In the 1960s, while a pupil at the private University College School in Hampstead – an intriguingly liberal part of London for a future scourge of the liberal elite – he edited the school magazine, and then did the same at the Leeds University student newspaper. He made both publications livelier and more controversial, though not by his later reactionary methods: he was on the left as a young man. He supported campus sit-ins and opposed the Vietnam war.

His politics did not change significantly during his first half dozen years as a professional journalist, despite working for the rightwing Daily Express, sister to his father’s paper. Then, in 1976, the Express posted Dacre to New York. Although the city’s public realm was deteriorating, encountering its immense private wealth and seemingly more fluid class system shifted him sharply rightwards. In 1979, a few months after Margaret Thatcher won power – partly by winning suburbs such as Arnos Grove – he joined the Daily Mail.

Under a smooth but ruthless editor, David English, the paper was overtaking the Express as the leading shaper and articulator of English middle-class conservatism. But Dacre, despite his political conversion and precociously extensive experience, was not an immediate success. He was better at composing features and columns than news reporting, and in the era’s macho tabloid culture those skills were less valued. Still shy, he did not believe he had the ability to be a really successful newspaper writer. So, in 1980, he stepped on to the Mail’s notoriously treacherous editorial ladder, where ambitious young editors and bitter, disappointed older ones fought daily, from nine in the morning until 10 at night, for the best stories and the favour of the paper’s editor. “Bollockings” – merciless critiques of inadequacies in performance – were handed out by senior editors to junior ones, and by editors to reporters.

At first, Dacre delivered his bollockings by memo, even to subordinates whose desks were only a few yards from his office. Then his behaviour started to change. He did not have a naturally loud voice: it was more of a mutter or a growl at normal volume. But he discovered that in the open but densely populated spaces of the Mail’s London newsroom he could raise it suddenly to great effect. At 6ft 3in, with a stern, thin-lipped mouth, a ruddy complexion that darkened further when agitated, and eyes that could flash with a theatrical fury, he gradually turned himself into one of the paper’s most renowned deliverers of bollockings.

“Shouting creates energy,” he told Desert Island Discs. He elaborated on this in another interview in 2002: “Newspapers are all about energy … I work as hard as anybody, if not harder. There’s not a job on the paper I can’t do and I work with them [my subordinates] very closely. I think if you were to ask them, honestly, they’d say he’s a big-mouthed, loud-mouthed tyrant, but … he gets the paper off [to the printers] at night and we all go home pretty proud of it. Yes, there’s a lot of shouting and a lot of swear words, but it’s never personal. I suppose I have a fault in that I don’t dwell on the great things we have in the paper that everybody else [on other papers] didn’t do – I always highlight the three probably footling things we didn’t do. But the day you stop doing that is the day you start going backwards.”

“He was terrifying,” says a former Mail columnist. “He wouldn’t always shout. Sometimes, his voice would get very low. He would say, ‘You’ve missed a story.’” Dacre wanted the Mail to report them faster and better than all its competitors – by which he meant not just other rightwing papers, but also the Financial Times and The Guardian.

First as deputy news editor, then news editor, and then finally as editor from 1992, Dacre honed a culture at the Mail that combined perfectionism with lavish journalistic resources and manipulative office politics. Trainee reporters were tested to destruction before being given staff jobs. Competing reporters were sometimes assigned to the same story. The editors wanted journalists who were “winners”, as they saw it, who would enable the Mail to be “victorious” over all other papers. More material would be gathered than each edition of the Mail needed, so that Dacre could micromanage what was included: the precise mix of resonant tales from everyday life, their heroes and villains, and the stories’ political messages, which were almost always socially conservative.

The Mail could afford to follow this model because it was profitable. In an era of generally declining newspaper circulations, the Mail’s consistently rose. Admiration for the paper’s commercial success, Dacre’s commanding office persona and the Mail’s political influence – on both the era’s Tory governments and conservative sections of the public – spread among proprietors of other papers. In 1991, he was tempted away from the Mail for a year to edit the London Evening Standard, and substantially increased its sales. In 1992, Rupert Murdoch offered him the editorship of The Times. In 1995, he was offered the editorship of the Telegraph. But apart from his time at the Standard, Dacre stayed at the Mail.

Two phases of the paper’s long working day became particularly crucial. In the morning, his most valued lieutenants would gather in his large office to be interrogated about the articles they had commissioned or might commission. Dacre would lean back, faux-casually, in his black leather chair, and sometimes rest his long legs on the desk. He liked the meeting to involve debate and welcomed being challenged, up to a point, but once he had made up his mind, even his smallest instruction was to be obeyed. “You very much know that you’ve got to do a story in a specific way,” a reporter who had recently left the Mail told me when I wrote about the paper in 2001. Another said: “Dacre will express some random opinion [and] it will dominate the paper for days.”

Early each evening, Dacre would emerge from his office to inspect what had been produced for the next day’s edition. Grabbing the printed page proofs laid out before him, he would cross out sentences and headlines, demand more attention-getting photographs and layouts, and throw irredeemable pages away. The process could go on for four hours, until 10 at night. It was believed at the Mail that “creative tension” produced a better paper, and also a collective sense of purpose. While subordinates nicknamed Dacre “the Grim Tweaker”, he thought he was conducting an orchestra. “Imagine the joy of putting together 96 pages [a typical edition] from nothing,” he told Desert Island Discs. “Believe me, it’s one of the headiest, most exciting experiences known to man.”

Dacre’s intensity and effectiveness soon produced disciples. One of the keenest was Tony Gallagher, a socially conservative Roman Catholic who became the Mail’s news editor in the late 1990s, after arriving there as a reporter at the start of the decade. “I remember Tony talked about Dacre with awe,” says a former Mail journalist. Like Dacre, Gallagher had worked for the Mail in New York and had a relentless, American-style work ethic, arriving in the London offices earlier and leaving later than almost anyone else, a routine which gave his lean, pale face a perpetually exhausted look. He spoke in a small, precise voice, and expected his instructions to reporters to be followed absolutely, not least because they were often translations of Dacre’s wishes, and Gallagher would be held responsible for any failures to carry them out. While Dacre was the grim tweaker, Gallagher was simply known by Mail staff as “the grim reaper”.

According to Adrian Addison’s revealing history of the paper, Mail Men, journalists who did complete assignments to the satisfaction of Gallagher and his lieutenants on the news desk rarely received praise. “Are you a one-hit wonder?” one reporter was asked by a news editor after getting a scoop. “Oh, and tuck your shirt in.” Success was almost never celebrated, merely registered as an absence of failure, and then the paper moved on to the next story.

One of Gallagher’s equally merciless deputies was a slightly younger man, also a former Mail reporter, Chris Evans, who had been at the paper since 1996. Always crisply dressed, he liked to communicate as tersely as possible. “If you’d made a mistake, he would send you a one-word email,” says a former Mail reporter. “You’d have to go back over all your notes and work out what the mistake was, then send him back an abject apology. He would then say nothing in reply.”

As Dacre’s editorship went on and on – outlasting the premierships of John Major, Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and David Cameron – his worldview solidified ever further. Homeowners, hard workers, entrepreneurs and the traditional family were fundamentally good; benefits claimants, government bureaucrats, leftists and foreign influences (from the European Union to immigrants) were not. Rather than being sent out on a story and trusted to work out what was most interesting and important, Mail reporters were often effectively told to confirm what Dacre already thought, which he believed perfectly reflected the thoughts of his readers. A former Mail journalist says a typical instruction from the news desk to a reporter would be: “This is the top line of the story. Now find three people who will say it.”

More than on other papers, the Mail’s reporting culture combined rigid editorial assumptions, almost random instructions and great thoroughness. “Often you’d be sent 200 miles on a whim,” remembered Ben Taylor, who reported on crime and other subjects for the Mail during the 1990s and 2000s, in an interview for the Irish business website The Currency. “One day you were in Birmingham, the next you were on the Lincolnshire coast, or south Wales …” In 2007, following the usual path for the most ambitious Mail journalists, Taylor became news editor. His approach was less confrontational than that of many of his predecessors. A journalist who has worked for him says: “He doesn’t call people ‘cunts’” – a favourite Dacre term. Yet Taylor was a huge admirer of Dacre and, underneath, almost as driven. Colleagues describe Taylor as a machine, fuelled by anger at the world, expressed through extended newsroom rants against “the enemy of the day”, such as politicians, civil servants, BBC executives and patronising elites in general.

Ted Verity rose up the Mail hierarchy over the same period, having started at the paper in 1990. He was another relatively polite but steely young editor. “He was not one of the shouters,” remembers a former colleague. “He had a bit of charm. He could have a conversation with you. He was able to work comfortably with women” – not always the case with the Mail’s overwhelmingly male editors. Praise and encouragement of reporters were even permitted. Yet Verity still believed in producing an aggressive paper. “The high court yesterday caved in to Europe over the ban on homosexuals serving in the armed forces,” he wrote in 1995, during a period as a Mail reporter, faithfully following the paper’s practice of getting as many of its enemies as possible into the same sentence.

Increasingly, says the former Mail columnist, the “cult of Dacre” made the paper almost self-parodic. “When he was away, you’d get Dacre lines without the brio.” By the third decade of his editorship, he had acquired almost as much self-assurance and power as a senior politician. Chauffeured daily to the basement car park of the paper’s offices in wealthy Kensington, he would emerge from the lift carrying a red briefcase, as though he was a cabinet minister.

During the early and mid-2010s, much of British politics seemed to be going as Dacre wished: the slashing of the state by the Cameron government; Labour’s defeat at the 2015 election under Ed Miliband, who had attacked the power of the rightwing press; the vote for Brexit; and Cameron’s replacement by the more socially conservative Theresa May.

The relationship between conservative journalism and conservative politics is two-way: each feeds, encourages and sharpens the other. Brexit was a cause created and sustained by both the rightwing press and rightwing politicians, pushing each other to demand a bigger rupture. The referendum result seemed to vindicate Dacre’s political and social instincts, while also encouraging his paper and its rightwing rivals to see the world in ever more binary terms. In 2016, the Mail famously described three judges who had ruled that parliament should have more say over the Brexit process as “enemies of the people”. Despite the arrival of more anarchic digital media, the scolding tone and stern, old-fashioned look of Dacre’s Mail seemed more potent than ever, particularly as pensioners became a bigger proportion of the electorate.

Yet Dacre himself was now past retirement age. In 2016, a new, increasingly high-profile campaign group, Stop Funding Hate, began lobbying brands to stop placing adverts in rightwing papers. Two years later, the Mail’s owners decided that the paper would benefit from a refreshing and softening of tone. Shortly before his 70th birthday, to his intense regret, Dacre was replaced as editor by Geordie Greig: a dozen years younger, more socially liberal and a remainer, previously editor of the less hardline Mail on Sunday. It seemed that Dacre’s four Mail proteges would have to seek editorships elsewhere.

Through their scattering, however, Dacre’s influence spread. Gallagher and Evans had already left the Mail for the Telegraph: Gallagher to become its head of news in 2006, Evans its news editor in 2007. Two years later, Gallagher was promoted to editor of the paper. 

At the Telegraph and across the press, including at non-rightwing titles such as The Guardian, it was assumed that anyone who had spent significant time at the Mail had acquired skills and a mentality that could not be learned elsewhere. “They were a bit more like the SAS than the regular army,” as one industry veteran puts it. As the internet made journalism more competitive and relentless, editors who had shown they could cope with the Mail’s pressures were attractive to proprietors of other papers.

The conservative commentator Stephen Glover wrote in The Independent about Gallagher’s appointment as Telegraph editor: “He is a rougher beast than any of the previous 13 editors … He knows things about story-getting which [his Telegraph predecessor] the urbane Will Lewis can only dream about … Unlike his predecessors, he appears to have no great respect for institutions … In short, Mr Gallagher is not a ‘Telegraph man’ as the term might be understood by anyone who cherishes the paper.” Glover concluded that the paper’s old culture had “finally been swept away”.

That culture could be over-romanticised. Alongside the old Telegraph’s gentle conservative journalists there had always been a few more politically aggressive characters, such as Peregrine Worsthorne, who wrote extensively in support of the racist white government of Rhodesia and the brutal anti-communist Chilean dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. Conservatism always has the potential to turn nasty when its practitioners consider the status quo to be under a serious enough threat.

Yet Gallagher’s appointment as editor in 2009 began a more thorough toughening-up. The perceived need for an overhaul was fed by uncertainty about the paper’s ownership and identity. After years of rumours, the Barclay brothers, reclusive rightwing tycoons who had owned the Telegraph since 2004, finally put the paper up for sale in 2019, but no buyer was found. In 2023, the Telegraph was taken from the Barclays by Lloyds’ Banking Group in a dispute over the brothers’ debts, then taken back by the Barclays. A further, three-year saga of abortive bids to buy the paper followed, including one from the autocratic government of the United Arab Emirates – which was vociferously opposed on the paper’s own pages by a former editor, Charles Moore. Far from being an island of old-fashioned English stability, the Telegraph was drifting among the unpredictable currents of global capital, politics and media.

As editor, Gallagher hunkered down, demanding hard graft and assertive, eye-catching reporting – not the usual stories about traditional England that other papers often didn’t think worth covering. During a period as the Telegraph’s deputy editor, he had pushed its reporters to pursue the scandal over MPs’ expenses. “Tony Gallagher knows how to run a newspaper, but he was a miserable sod,” says a former Telegraph reporter. “Dry and humourless. It was hard to get him to crack a smile … Him and [Chris] Evans understood issues through campaigns, which we had to hammer day after day.” In a 2013 talk on editing, Gallagher described himself as one of the “veterans of the Thatcher era, and obsessed by it”. Like her, he did not suffer fools gladly. He confronted and often sacked journalists he considered inadequate. “Papers need to change to survive,” Gallagher said coolly in his 2013 talk.

But under his editorship the Telegraph also shed too many readers. In 2014, he was replaced by Evans. The paper’s culture became more unforgiving still. “It was impossible to please the news desk,” says a former reporter. “They’d say no to a story idea you brought them. Two days later, they’d slam down the latest Daily Mail on your desk, with that story in it, and say: ‘Why the fuck didn’t you get that story?’”

The Mail’s long-hours, minimal-praise culture was also imported. “The best thing was to be ignored,” says the former reporter. Some journalists considered Evans and his lieutenants “worse than Dacre”. The desks of out-of-favour reporters were moved into humiliating locations in corridors, behind filing cabinets, or next to busy coffee machines. Even some senior journalists would wait until their editors were out of sight before they went to the toilet.

Boris Johnson’s premiership from 2019 to 2022 further changed the Telegraph. His previous career as a writer for the paper, hardline approach to Brexit, enthusiasm for culture wars, and personal disdain for the pandemic lockdown rules made him a perfect politician for many rightwing journalists. Yet, as his premiership began to buckle under the weight of his scandals, lies and evasions, it presented the Telegraph with a choice: should it begin to distance itself, or support him regardless? The paper chose the latter, which meant that its political coverage became ever more shrill and detached. After Johnson was finally forced from office, the paper’s dogmatic quality remained.

Since its creation in the late 19th century, the British rightwing press had usually been a top-down culture. Dacre had refined it into a kind of science. Yet, while during the first two decades of his editorship, the 1990s and 2000s, he and his proteges had applied their methods and perspectives to a relatively stable society, during the 2010s and 2020s they were encountering – and helping to create – a more volatile and angry country.

This work still provided editors with a good living. While Evans was completing the Telegraph’s transformation, his old boss Gallagher, despite the unhappy end of his editorship there, remained in demand across the conservative press. In early 2015, he went back to the Mail as deputy editor. A few months later, Gallagher was poached to be editor of The Sun. After five years at that job, in 2020, he became deputy editor of The Times. In 2022, he was promoted to editor. His easy switches between what used to be seen as upmarket, mid-market and downmarket journalism showed how the old barriers within the rightwing media had effectively dissolved.

In 2020, this cultural revolution reached the Sunday Times, when it hired Ben Taylor from the Mail as deputy editor. Like the old Telegraph, the paper had been quite a comfortable place to work, with editors sometimes absent for boozy lunches and a focus on interviews and magazine features, rather than urgent news gathering. Taylor was brought in to introduce more of the latter. The reverberations of his first day as deputy editor were felt even by distant foreign correspondents. He called the paper’s existing news operation “ridiculous”, and hired four Daily Mail reporters. In 2023, he was promoted to editor, and applied his methods across the paper, which began to produce more scoops, particularly in its political reporting. His editing was sometimes consciously performative. He would leave his office door open, shout out journalists’ names, and expect them to run in when summoned. Every 20 minutes or so, he would come out of his office, stomp around the newsroom, and look at what reporters had on their computer screens. If he saw something they were writing that displeased him, he would say, “What the fuck’s that? Get rid!”

A year after Taylor’s arrival at the Sunday Times, a change of editor at the Mail completed the rise of Dacre’s proteges. Greig’s experiment in producing a less angry paper, while admired by some liberal journalists, was not judged a success by the Mail’s owners, not least because sales fell. In 2021, he was replaced by Verity. For the previous three years, he had edited the Mail on Sunday. Following the Dacre model, Verity had made it more journalistically aggressive and more hostile to liberal institutions, particularly the EU.

Over this period, Dacre had gradually become a less frequent presence at the Mail offices, confined to largely honorary roles. Eventually, he lost his company chauffeur. Yet on the day that Greig was fired, and Verity promoted, Dacre was reportedly seen back in the Mail building, and then at a book launch for the Conservative peer Michael Ashcroft, “grinning from ear to ear”, according to a source quoted by the magazine Prospect. Shortly afterwards, Dacre was made editor-in-chief of Daily Mail and General Trust’s newspaper division. The chair of the Mail’s owners, Jonathan Harmsworth, great-grandson of the paper’s co-founder, Viscount Rothermere, said that Dacre “will be taking an active role advising me and the editors”.

Could his influence over the press go on for many years more? Dacre has long thought about journalism in terms of legacies and lineages. In 2002, he told the British Journalism Review that at the Mail, “We have layers of talent and skill I have quite carefully nurtured and brought on.” At Rupert Murdoch’s 95th birthday in New York in March, Dacre teasingly reminded him that most of the editors present from Murdoch papers had first worked under him at the Mail. Besides the four proteges in this article, Victoria Newton, The Sun’s editor, worked briefly at Dacre’s Mail, as for a longer period did The Sun’s deputy editor, James Slack; as did Maggie O’Riordan, deputy editor of The Times; and Keith Poole, editor of the New York Post.

Dacre considers all of them his “alumni”, and proudly treats them as such when he sees them socially. Dacre, Gallagher, Evans, Verity and Taylor occasionally go out to dinner together. Gallagher, Evans and Dacre have also been known to picnic together in the car park at Twickenham during Six Nations rugby matches.

Yet the ascendancy of Dacre’s version of rightwing journalism is more fragile than it seems. Editorial budgets are tighter than in his heyday. There is less shouting at reporters by editors, because shouting in workplaces is more likely to lead to HR interventions. His proteges are less overpowering characters, and their editorships are more shaped by proliferating digital data about reader preferences and behaviour. Meanwhile, the diffusion of newspaper journalism into multiple forms – websites, podcasts, video, social media content, newsletters – has made the interplay of headlines, text and photographs that Dacre mastered less central. The Mail’s website is highly successful, but its chattier, less politicised tone and greater emphasis on showbiz stories has diluted the Mail’s brand. Dacre has a history of scepticism about online journalism. At the Mail’s summer party in 1999, he reportedly told staff: “A lot of people say that the internet is the future for newspapers. Well, I say to that: bullshit.com.”

The speed with which stories can be copied online means that “beating” other papers has lost much of its meaning. More aggressive and addictive alternatives to the rightwing press are proliferating: ultra-conservative content creators, influencers and social-media zealots, including the world’s first trillionaire, Elon Musk, rail against the same enemies as the rightwing papers – yet in an even more relentless, instantly reactive, uninhibited way. The rapid rise of the new hard-right party Restore Britain, endorsed by Musk, has been driven largely by social media. Meanwhile, the Mail has warned that Restore could become a vehicle for neo-Nazis, and may also seriously damage Reform – which the Mail sometimes strongly supports – by splitting the rightwing populist vote. At the same time, Donald Trump’s presidency has opened the eyes of rightwing British media consumers to the almost infinite supply of conservative material from the US.

The globalisation of reactionary journalism, it is true, does also create an opportunity for the British rightwing press to find a more international readership. This helps explain why papers such as the Telegraph seem happy to shed some of their traditional British customers. About 40% of its disproportionately male, affluent and elderly readers now live abroad.

Similarly, the growing competitive pressures on the Mail, which have prompted waves of redundancies there since 2020, have, counterintuitively, extended its influence. More and more former Mail reporters have found jobs at other papers, often bringing their Mail methods and assumptions with them – an ever larger Dacre diaspora.

A more overt attempt to extend the paper’s influence has failed, however. In March, an offer from the Mail’s owners to buy the Telegraph, which appeared to be slowly but steadily progressing, was suddenly gazumped by a more generous bid from the Berlin-based media conglomerate Axel Springer. The latter already owns conservative papers in Germany, some of which have promoted the views of Musk and other hard-right populists, so may allow the Telegraph to continue along its current path. But for such a nationalistic, anti-EU British paper to end up with a German owner is an outcome that the Telegraph’s remainer critics can enjoy.

There are other paradoxes about what you could call the Dacre supremacy. The preoccupations of the papers edited by him and his proteges – crime, immigration, Islam, benefits fraud, the supposed threat of trans rights, the supposed decay of public and private morality, the supposed rottenness of liberalism, leftism and “wokeness”, the supposed promise of hard-right Toryism and Reform – have been prominent in our political discourse for years, sometimes decades. Yet apart from Theresa May, briefly, no Conservative prime minister since Margaret Thatcher has satisfied Dacre. Despite having a decent chance of being our next rightwing premier, Nigel Farage has yet to fill that vacuum. Dacre’s domineering journalism has been partly powered by disappointment.

Meanwhile, on a party-political level, his proteges’ papers have become divided and sometimes indecisive: the Telegraph often, but not always, pro-Reform; the Mail sometimes suggesting that a Tory-Reform coalition is needed to “unite the right”; The Times not endorsing any party at the last general election; and the Sunday Times even backing Labour then. With the media fragmenting and the attention spans of many readers shortening, campaigns by individual papers against specific enemies of the right are harder to sustain. Andy Burnham will face the conservative press after its power has probably peaked.

According to the authoritative British Social Attitudes survey, over recent years the country has already changed, erratically but significantly, in many ways that the rightwing press dislikes: becoming more multicultural, more liberal about personal morality, more positive about the EU and workers’ rights, and more disenchanted with big business, the rich and the free market. Meanwhile, the state has grown and taxes have risen. Angry conservative journalism requires a constant supply of fresh targets. But in the neverending battle over social, cultural and political values, if your enemies multiply, that’s also a kind of defeat.

In Arnos Grove, where Dacre grew up, and which he lovingly described to The New Yorker in 2012 as “frugal, reticent, utterly self-reliant, and immensely aspirational”, the gently undulating streets of plain but comfortable-looking houses, often with kitchen extensions and deep, carefully tended back gardens, can seem little changed from the respectable, essentially private English spaces of his remembered childhood. But at the local cafe where I had lunch after a couple of hours of walking around, the food, background music and customer conversations were all Turkish. Unless Dacre’s proteges and their papers can come to terms with the country as it is, rather than as it used to be, their days of dominance will be numbered.