18th May 2011
Fleet Street hasn’t been out of stories this week – even with what seems like a record number of super-injunctions preventing the papers reporting sleaze and sex. First there was the Premier League footballer; then the famous actor; then on Thursday, Liberal Democrat peer, Lord Oakeshott, used parliamentary privilege to reveal that Sir Fred Goodwin, like BBC political interviewer Andrew Marr, had been using a super injunction to cover-up an affair. The Mirror reported that the woman was a colleague of the former Royal Bank of Scotland boss and that he had overseen two of her promotions in the run-up to the bank’s collapse.
Glamour model and former Big Brother contestant, Imogen Thomas, was accused in court of trying to blackmail an unnameable Premier League family man after their six-month affair was about to become public.
In a tearful, perfectly practised speech lasting no more than a few minutes outside the Royal Courts of Justice, Miss Thomas asked exactly what Parliament is trying to work out: how is it fair for one person’s name to be spared and another’s trashed?
Jemima Khan woke up in a “bloody nightmare” earlier this week after a rogue Tweeter accused her of being one of the many celebrities using the expensive gagging order. She tweeted: “Rumour that I have a super-injunction preventing publication of ‘intimate’ photos of me and Jeremy Clarkson. NOT TRUE!” Unfortunately for Ms Khan, whose brother Zac Goldsmith MP has also been identified as using a super injunction, it was her own Twitter storm that caught the eye of the British media.
Clarkson used his Sunday Times column to deny the rumour; Rod Liddle’s innuendo-ridden ideal dinner party in the paper two weeks dropped hints at who had taken out the innocuous injunctions slightly less obvious than Private Eye’s editorial.
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Chris Huhne too may have wished he’d taken out a super injunction after reports of his apparent driving and expenses scandals found their way into the headlines. Huhne has been dogged for the past few weeks as his estranged wife, Vicky Pryce, revealed to journalists that he had asked her to take a speeding fine for him. Police in Essex are now investigating the claims, with Huhne due to speak to them in the coming weeks. Allegations of “false declaration” over election campaign expenses and a second extra-marital affair have also dogged the Energy Secretary.
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Like Huhne, cabinet colleague Ken Clarke’s comments on some rapes not being as serious as others caused what he described as “media brouhaha”. Labour leader Ed Miliband’s call for the resignation of the Justice Secretary was criticised; Spectator editor, Fraser Nelson, however, urged David Cameron to “cleanse his Cabinet of the undead”.
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Politics and politicians are no stranger to controversy, but news of Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s arrest in the United States rocked the diplomatic world – surely creating some of the most memorable front pages of the year so far.
France was said to be in shock after the International Monetary Fund’s managing director and potential Socialist party presidential candidate, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was arrested in New York City. French media law makes it an offence to show photos of a person in handcuffs before they have been found guilty. Strauss-Kahn’s lawyer has already warned the French press that his client will sue if they continue to publish “prejudicial” images.
Having been taken off a flight by police at JFK airport, the 62-year-old was arrested and detained for an alleged sexual attack on a chambermaid at the luxury Sofitel hotel – a charge that he denies.
Strauss-Kahn quit his position at the IMF on Thursday, sparking speculation as to who will take over. After hinting that he would block any efforts of former prime minister, Gordon Brown, of succeeding Strauss-Kahn as the head of the IMF, David Cameron shall be relieved to hear that Brown will not be putting his hat in the ring.
Martin Kettle over at the Guardian considered Peter Mandelson as the only British contender in the race. Chancellor George Osborne instead was rumoured to be considering nomination of Christine Lagarde, the French economy minister. Mandelson, however, could be expecting a new role, as David Cameron prepares to back the former business secretary as the new Director General of the World Trade Organisation.








Rupert and James Murdoch questioned by MPs