Labour won’t take Max Mosley donations after campaign leaflet claim
POLICE WILL “assess” a dossier on privacy campaigner Max Mosley following the disclosure he published a campaign leaflet linking non-white immigrants with diseases such as tuberculosis, VD and leprosy.
The pamphlet, supporting a candidate for his father Sir Oswald Mosley’s Union Movement in a 1961 by-election, was unearthed by the Daily Mail in historical archives in Manchester.
The Mail said its discovery raises questions over evidence which Mr Mosley gave under oath in a High Court trial when he successfully sued the News Of The World in 2008.
Mr Mosley insisted he did not recall the leaflet, and would not be deterred from his campaign for reforms to protect ordinary people from press abuses.
The newspaper passed a dossier on the claims to the Crown Prosecution Service, which in turn sent it to Scotland Yard.
A police spokeswoman said: “An assessment will be carried out.”
Meanwhile, a senior Labour source described the views expressed by Mr Mosley as “repugnant” and said neither deputy leader Tom Watson, who has received more than £500,000 in donations from the former Formula One boss, nor the party would take any further payments from him.
“The Labour Party has moved away for large-scale donations from wealthy individuals,” the source said.
“I don’t believe that there will be any more payments from Max Mosley to the Labour Party or Tom Watson. The last payments were made last year.”