Calgary Herald

Ex-murdoch executive reveals close ties with U.K. politician­s

PM thought ‘LOL’ meant ‘lots of love’ in texts: Brooks

- HENRY CHU

It was a lesson in text-speak for Britain’s most powerful man from one of its most powerful women. “LOL” didn’t mean what Prime Minister David Cameron thought it did, said former newspaper executive Rebekah Brooks, who regularly received text messages from him.

“He would sign them off ‘DC’ in the main,” Brooks said, referring to Cameron’s initials. “Occasional­ly he would sign them off ‘LOL’ — ‘lots of love’ — until I told him it meant ‘laugh out loud,’ and then he didn’t sign them off (that way) anymore.”

It was certainly an LOL moment during Brooks’s testimony in a Lon- don courtroom Friday as part of a judicial inquiry into media ethics. But the disclosure also underscore­d the warm person alties between the prime minister and Brooks, the former head of media baron Rupert Murdoch’s British newspapers who was forced to resign in disgrace last summer.

Once one of the country’s most influentia­l women, Brooks stepped down because of the public outrage over phone hacking at the now-defunct News of the World tabloid. The ongoing scandal also sparked the judge-led inquiry into the way the media operate, leading to Brooks’s much-anticipate­d appearance on the witness stand.

The inquiry is currently examining the close relationsh­ip between politician­s and the media. Brooks’s testimony Friday showed how blurry the lines could be in that relationsh­ip, where profession­al, journalist­ic interests intersecte­d with personal ones.

As the head of a stable of newspapers including the serious-minded Times of London as well as the best- selling, salacious tabloid the Sun, Brooks enjoyed access to Britain’s highest-ranking decision-makers, who courted her partly in hopes of favourable media coverage for their political agendas and careers.

But in an illuminati­on of the way class and power are inextricab­ly linked in this country, Brooks also socialized with some of them, running into them at birthday parties or riding horses in their company. Both Brooks and Cameron, for example, own weekend country estates close to each other in affluent Oxfordshir­e.

Under oath Friday, Brooks said the profession­al lines remained clear.

“Some friendship­s were made, but I don’t think I ever forgot I was a journalist, and I don’t think they ever forgot they were a politician,” she said.

She scoffed at recent newspaper reports that Cameron, a childhood friend of her husband’s, sometimes texted her as many as a dozen times a day.

“It’s prepostero­us. One would hope the leader of the opposition or the prime minister would have better things to do,” Brooks said, adding that the real number was more like once or twice a week “on average.”

Her meteoric rise within the Murdoch media empire came to a crashing halt last summer after revelation­s that the News of the World had tapped into the voice-mail messages of a kidnapped teenager who was later found killed. Brooks was editor of the tabloid at the time.

It was a difficult moment, but one presumably made easier by the outpouring of support and commiserat­ion that she said came her way from Cameron, former prime minister Tony Blair and other high-profile personages.

“I received some indirect messages from No. 10 (Downing St.), No. 11, Home Office, Foreign Office,” Brooks said, matter-of-factly rattling off the work addresses of the prime minister, the chancellor of the exchequer, the home secretary and the foreign secretary, who together are the most powerful people in all of Britain.

 ?? Leon Neal, Afp-getty Images ?? Rebekah Brooks testified that even though Prime Minister David Cameron texted her regularly, she insists profession­al lines remained clear.
Leon Neal, Afp-getty Images Rebekah Brooks testified that even though Prime Minister David Cameron texted her regularly, she insists profession­al lines remained clear.

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