Daily Mail

Ephraim Hardcastle

- Email: peter.mckay@dailymail.co.uk

WAS the departure of devout Christian Tim Farron as Lib Dem leader provoked by Channel 4 News presenter Cathy Newman’s probing questions about his attitude to gay sex? His answer – that personal morality didn’t matter, ‘to understand Christiani­ty is to understand that we are all sinners’ – angered gay rights zealots. But would Ms Newman ask a Muslim leader if the violent persecutio­n of homosexual­s practised by many members of their faith could ever be justified?

ALLY McBeal star Calista Flockhart, 52, celebratin­g seven years’ marriage to Harrison Ford, 74, after dating him for eight years, enthuses in an interview: ‘Wow, I keep forgetting he’s 22 years older than me. It doesn’t factor into our relationsh­ip at all. I like the way he looks first thing in the morning. It’s not handsome, it’s more cute. He looks like a little boy. The truth is I sometimes feel very much older.’ As a Hollywood cynic wrote a month into Zsa Zsa Gabor’s sixth marriage (she had nine): ‘Who said it wouldn’t last?’

SIR Cliff Richard, 76, reflecting on his legal battle with the police and BBC over discredite­d sex abuse claims, says he had to take them seriously – ‘so I got great lawyers who are seriously expensive!’ He’s still in dispute with the BBC, which had broadcast live coverage of the (pointless) 2014 raid on his Berkshire home. In the 1980s, the then director-general, Alasdair Milne, lost his job when the BBC had to apologise for calling two Tory MPs, Gerald Howarth and Neil Hamilton, extreme Right-wing Nazi admirers. They each received an apology and £20,000 each, plus their legal costs. Milne was forced to resign. He remains one of the few DGs not to have been awarded a knighthood or peerage. Current DG Lord Hall, pictured, a BBC retiree rehired hastily to steady the ship after the Jimmy Savile sex scandal, already has a peerage, so he has less to lose if he carries the can for the Cliff debacle.

MIGHT Theresa May invite over France’s President Emmanuel Macron, 39, for a state visit? A diplomatic source says: ‘It’s likely. Her Government could do with a shot of successful Macron’s miraculous electoral elixir. And we’d all get the chance to inspect more closely his lovely wife of 64, Brigitte.’

SIR Vince Cable, 74, newly returned to the Commons, considers the prospect of becoming Lib Dem leader now that Tim Farron has gone. Is time on his side? Critics of ex-leader Menzies Campbell, chosen when he was 64, said the party needed a younger man. Labour’s Jeremy Corbyn is 68, but the old goat defies all laws of political gravity.

APROPOS Sir Vince, the return to Parliament of him and Sir Ed Davey means the party, with only 12 seats, now has the highest percentage of MPs with knighthood­s. They also have 102 peers, far more (based on number of parliament­ary seats) than the Tories and Labour. Gongless ex-Lib Dem MP Lembit Opik, explains: ‘You don’t have to be average to get a peerage in the party. You can be worse.’

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