Scottish Daily Mail

Osborne in furore over integrity at newspaper

- By Vanessa Allen

FORMER Chancellor George Osborne was yesterday embroiled in a row over claims London’s Evening Standard promised ‘moneycan’t-buy’ coverage to big businesses for £3million.

The newspaper faced accusation­s it had effectivel­y sold positive news coverage to brands including Google and the controvers­ial taxi app Uber, in return for sponsorshi­p of a planned campaign.

The two were among six firms to each pay £500,000 to be part of the paper’s ‘London 2020’ project which will highlight issues including air pollution and housing. The Evening Standard said it had agreed partnershi­ps to support its campaign but denied the deals threatened its editorial integrity and independen­ce. It said any commercial content would be ‘clearly identifiab­le’.

Mr Osborne became the newspaper’s editor last year and was said to have directed the London 2020 project, pitched to potential commercial sponsors as offering ‘money-can’t-buy’ coverage.

A sales presentati­on to businesses said: ‘We expect every campaign to generate numerous news stories, comment pieces and high-profile backers.’

Details of the deal were revealed on the news website open-Democracy, which claimed the Standard offered ‘favourable’ editorial comment and news coverage as part of its sales presentati­on. Coffee chain Starbucks rejected the offer and a senior executive told the website: ‘Buying positive news coverage is PR death... something you might do in Saudi Arabia, but not here.’

Newspapers sell adverts to companies but can also offer ‘advertoria­ls’ – paid-for or sponsored articles which are clearly marked as such.

Blurring the line between journalism and advertisin­g, or allowing commercial pressures to influence editorial content, is generally seen as a breach of Britain’s tradition of Press freedom and independen­ce.

Mr Osborne’s appointmen­t as editor attracted criticism after it emerged that he had a £650,000-ayear part-time advisory job with City firm BlackRock, which holds a £500million stake in Uber.

The Cameron-Osborne government also came under fire for its links to Uber. Black cab drivers brought Westminste­r to a standstill in a protest over claims David Cameron and Mr Osborne told aides to lobby against a planned crackdown on the online firm in 2015.

Rachel Whetstone – a friend of Mr Cameron who is married to his former strategist Steve Hilton – quit her job as Uber’s policy chief as it emerged the informatio­n watchdog had begun an investigat­ion into the affair.

Uber has agreed to support the Evening Standard’s clean air campaign as part of the London 2020 project. Google’s involvemen­t is understood to be linked to technology in schools. OpenDemocr­acy claimed the campaign would include ‘unbranded news stories’ which had been paid for by the newspaper’s commercial partners.

The Evening Standard said in a statement: ‘It is absolutely not the case that any commercial agreement would lead to “favourable” news coverage.’

‘Buying coverage is PR death’

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