THE TELEGRAPH:
Rishi Sunak might fear upsetting Arab friends, but these are great British institutions whose future is now in doubt
joined this newspaper in 1979 and have subsequently edited all the three titles in its stable –
The Spectator,
The Sunday Telegraph and
The Daily Telegraph. I remain on the staff. I have therefore reached that stage in life when kind younger people, trying to make conversation, say, “You must have seen a few changes, then!”
I have. They include the defeat of the print unions in the 1980s, the consequent new technology and business success, the rise of the internet and the conquest of print by digital. This has involved frequent meetings with triumph and disaster of the sort Kipling recognised in his famous poem.
As the editor at most of these junctures, I have also seen changes of ownership. I am familiar with the process by which one commanding and successful owner gets into difficulties and finds that he (it has always been men) must cede control to another.
This has happened with the ownership of the Telegraph Group by the Barclay family. From the editorial point of view, they were good proprietors, in that they did not tell their editors what to write.
They also did not tell their editors, however, that they had put up their titles as
collateral against big debts. This summer, in a controversial move, Lloyds Bank, angry that the Barclays’ debt to them was not being repaid, put the papers (which are profitable) into receivership. That was a change I had not seen before.
» |
Charles Moore | Friday, November 24, 2023
This is an excellent article. I agree with Charles Moore’s sentiments absolutely.
It is an outrage that these newspapers and publications could be sold to the UAE. First of all, is every damn thing in the UK now for sale to the highest bidder? Is nothing sacred? Can’t we Brits keep anything British anymore?
Secondly, and every bit as important: selling our press to the Islamic world is a sure fire way of getting rid of press freedom. It is also a fast track to the Islamisation of the UK.
To use Margaret Thatcher’s famous words: No! No! No! – © Mark Alexander
A related article
here with a further comment from me.