Murdoch rag puts party bias above tabloid irreverence
Surprise! We asked yesterday whether the Sun would put #piggate on its front page, replete with its trademark headline puns, mock-ups and cartoons.
Failure to do so, we said, would expose how the paper puts party bias ahead of its role as an irreverent tabloid.
Imagine how the Sun would have covered Lord Ashcroft’s claims if they were made about Labour’s Jeremy Corbyn, let alone Ed Miliband…
So to today’s front page. Judge for yourself:
This is pretty tame stuff. Where are the pigs? Where are the cartoons? Where are the mock-up pictures of ‘what the prime minister might have looked like’ putting his privates in the mouth of a pig?
Pig-related puns do appear at the foot of the page, but only about the ‘swine who squealed’, referring to Ashcroft’s sources.
Instead, the story focuses on claims about drug parties, which the paper knows are far less embarrassing to the PM.
This approach continues inside the paper, where a story spins the pig’s head claims into Downing Street launching a ‘witch hunt’ to find the MPs who ‘squealed’.
(Note to the Sun: the thing about witch hunts is, witches don’t exist.)
The best it can offer is a small digest of cartoons from Twitter – plus a column by Cameron’s friend Toby Young saying the claims are ‘porkies’.
On the usually boisterous Sun Says editorial page, there is precisely no mention of any of Ashcroft’s claims.
How to explain this amazing restraint?
The Sun’s Murdoch-owned stablemate the Times provides a clue.
A small story on its front page begins:
Cameron biography claims start to unravel
“Sensational claims that David Cameron engaged in obscene activities with a pig’s head while a student at Oxford were unravelling last night after the authors of a new biography admitted they had failed to corroborate the story.
The prime minister was subjected to humiliation and ridicule yesterday over claims that he performed an indecent act with a pig during a bizarre initiation ritual.”
‘The prime minister was subjected to humiliation and ridicule’ – this is an invitation to sympathise with the most powerful politician in the country. Is he incapable of defending himself? Either way, it’s very good of the Times to step in on his behalf, (unsolicited, naturally).
Again, there is not a single comment about the Ashcroft claims – no pigs, no non-doms, not even drugs – on the editorial page of the Times.
There is a light-hearted column by Hugo Rifkind (which accepts the drugs claims aren’t interesting). And there is a cartoon of Cameron holding a pig – but the butt of the joke is Labour’s Jeremy Corbyn.
It looks remarkably like the Murdoch press is playing the part of the Conservative party’s press office, yet again.
The Sun has thus relinquished its defence for daily insults to its readers’ intelligence.
It isn’t ‘giving the people what they want’. Plenty of Sun readers wanted to see Cameron get a ribbing over #piggate.
It isn’t giving each story the same irreverent treatment.
Where its political team is concerned, the Sun plumps for deference over irreverence, and ducks its responsibility to do the one thing it does well.
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Adam Barnett is a staff writer at Left Foot Forward. Follow MediaWatch on Twitter
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24 Responses to “Sun bottles it on #piggate scandal by sparing Cameron’s blushes”
guidofawkes
Where to start? I remember when this blog was launched as an “evidence based” policy site.
jed shed
Straw man anybody…?
DaveJones
The British public have accepted this as a student prank – nothing more.
Get over it, and move on.
Neil McEvoy
No that’s what you are hoping for, it’s not the reality. Like every one else I was involved in lots of silly student pranks, at no point did any of us fuck a pigs head. The British public are rightly concerned and will continue to be so for a looong time.
Alex Mason
Sanctimonious much? Probably it’s that stick up your backside that’s prevented you from having any mates in your youth – if you had, you’d have probably be able to contextualize what the average young man is like when he’s with his wolf pack. Notwithstanding most liberals would probably think that the prohibition of drugs is wrong – I tell you mate, you could do with them more than most: You might even loosen up a bit.