Calgary Herald

‘I have never asked a prime minister for anything’

Defiant Murdoch denies seeking political favours for media empire

- KATE HOLTON AND GEORGINA PRODHAN

Rupert Murdoch rejected accusation­s Wednesday that he used his media empire to play puppet master to a succession of British prime ministers, electrifyi­ng a media inquiry that has shaken the government and unnerved much of the establishm­ent.

The appearance before a judge by the world’s most powerful media mogul was a defining moment in a scandal that has laid bare collusion among ministers, police and Murdoch’s News Corp., reigniting long-held concerns over the close ties among big money, the media and power-holders in Britain.

Unlike an appearance before parliament last year when Murdoch appeared at times painfully slow to answer questions, the 81-yearold remained calm and considered throughout, saying he wished to use the hearing to put some myths straight.

“I have never asked a prime minister for anything,” he said.

He was also asked about his relationsh­ip with politics and British “toffs,” a reference to his regular attacks on Britain’s gilded establishm­ent, which the Australian-born tycoon has lampooned as snobbish and inefficien­t.

Cameron reluctantl­y ordered the inquiry last July as a phone-hacking scandal at Murdoch’s News of the World tabloid spiralled out of control, forcing him to side against the media empire that helped propel him into power a year earlier.

He is now suffering his worst period since he took power, with Murdoch’s Sun and Times papers particular­ly critical, and facing calls to sack a minister accused of colluding with News Corp. He told a raucous session of Parliament on Wednesday that politician­s from all parties had become too close to the magnate.

“I think on all sides of the House there’s a bit of a need for a hand on heart,” he told a chamber of jeering opposition lawmakers. “We all did too much cosying up to Rupert Murdoch.”

Cameron and at least two former prime ministers are expected to appear for questionin­g in the coming months.

Under questionin­g, Murdoch appeared in control, at times drawing chuckles from some of the 70 lawyers, family members and journalist­s packed into the Victorian gothic courtroom, where he cracked jokes about the destructio­n of unions.

The man who has for years portrayed himself as an underdog, said he had simply tried to shine a light on the country on the behalf of the working classes.

One member of the public who queued in the rain to see the man who had dominated British political life for 40 years said he had entered the courtroom hostile and left quite impressed.

“He’s an old man,” Ron, a 76-yearold retired banker, said.

“I think he’s stood up to it quite well.”

While Murdoch denied influencin­g the editorial stance of his Times papers, he did admit that anyone seeking to understand his opinion should “look at the Sun.”

“I’m not good at holding my tongue,” he added.

He also shed some light on recent British political history, saying that he had been a great admirer of Margaret Thatcher but less impressed by her successor John Major, whom he could not remember meeting.

He reserved some of his strongest comments for former prime minister Gordon Brown and some of his funniest for Tony Blair.

“If our flirtation is ever consummate­d, Tony, I suspect we will end up making love like porcupines. Very, very carefully,” he admitted telling Blair, who ruled from 1997 to 2007.

Brown, he said, had been a friend until he threatened to “declare war” on News Corp. over the Sun’s decision to withdraw its support for the Labour party. “I did not think he was in a very balanced state of mind.”

Moving on to the current government, Murdoch said he had not found it strange that Cameron took time out of his own private holiday to meet him on a yacht off a Greek island in 2008.

“I’ve explained that politician­s go out of their way to impress people in the press,” he said. “That’s the game.”

Murdoch biographer Michael Wolff told Reuters he thought the News Corp. boss had performed brilliantl­y.

“I’d like to see fireworks as much as the next guy but that hasn’t happened,” he said. “Murdoch is very much on his game.”

On Wednesday, hordes of photograph­ers chased Murdoch’s car as he was driven away from the central London court.

He will return today to continue to explain his complex ties to Britain.

 ?? Justin Tallis, Afp-getty Images ?? News Corp. chief Rupert Murdoch and his wife, Wendi Deng, drive away from the High Court in central London on Wednesday after Murdoch gave evidence at a media inquiry.
Justin Tallis, Afp-getty Images News Corp. chief Rupert Murdoch and his wife, Wendi Deng, drive away from the High Court in central London on Wednesday after Murdoch gave evidence at a media inquiry.

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