Patrick jephson not intended for republication or sale selected royal journalism
Download 240.66 Kb. Pdf ko'rish
|
SERVANTS AND SPIN “Whatever’s going to come out at the end may as well come out at the beginning.” It’s an old political maxim and its enduring truth is obvious to anyone who can remember photographs of shamefaced public figures, driven from the spotlight by some all-too human failing. What’s true for politicians is doubly true for the royal family. Now we’re reading about another royal scandal and, surprise surprise, it’s about allegations of the oldest human failing of all. Except we’re not reading about it, because the royal servant at the centre of the allegations has obtained an injunction to prevent a newspaper printing an interview with another royal servant. To rub the point in, we’re told that a senior member of the royal family has “demanded” that the story should not be published. Louis XVI would be pleased. Confused? Angry? Many people are, not least because it inevitably looks like the royal family are getting judges to do them favours. Which is not really what centuries of British legal evolution is supposed to have achieved. It looks especially bad when the Paul Burrell trial fiasco is still fresh in our minds. For this reason – not voyeurism or circulation-boosting – the press are right to warn about the danger the case poses to freedom of expression. For a judge to grant what is known as prior restraint is very rare indeed, for the good reason that it comes perilously close to censorship. I know the people at the centre of this growing storm. One was near the top of the royal heap, one was a lot lower down the pecking order. I know what one is alleged to have done to the other and what one is said to have seen the other doing with and/or to a member of the royal family. Salacious stuff. Such absurd convolutions to avoid widely-known specifics just fuel the imagination. And a well-fueled imagination is no help when we’re trying to get at the truth. So it’s important to remember: only the people directly involved know what really happened. But I know which one of them I’d trust to get closest to it. Both servants can rightly claim that they were good at their jobs, sacrificed their own family lives for the sake of their employer and were completely loyal to their royal boss. But they can’t both be being loyal to the truth. One, using a sworn affidavit, is now trying to communicate his sense of grievance against the other in the press. In response, the other has recruited top lawyers and a royal ally to secure the full protection of the law. The law has given that protection - for the moment. Now everybody holds their breath. The embattled servants wonder whose version of the truth will go into history. The royal establishment wonders if a miracle will happen and perhaps it’ll all drift out of the public mind. The lawyers calculate their fees and wait… An injunction in these circumstances is just a finger in the dyke. SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 180 As I watched the opposing legal teams scurry in and out of the aptly named Royal Courts of Justice, I remembered that old uncomfortable reality: in any scandal, it’s not the original sin that causes the damage, it’s the cover-up. Looking back, the “sin” may look tame – we are, after all, pretty broadminded these days. However bad it seems, it’s only guaranteed to get worse if you hope it will go away. And if you try to get other people to make it go away for you, chances are you multiply the explosion when it hits. What we’re not broadminded about are attempts to suppress or distort the truth to protect the blushes of the people at the top. In this case the priority at the outset was not to establish the truth but to make it go away [ Peat Report 1.140 p36]. But, as the parties concerned are learning all over again, the truth has a habit of coming back and biting you. And it bites harder in the hands of an aggrieved person, determined to obtain justice from those he feels betrayed him. So, incredibly, a story that could and should have stayed safely behind palace walls is threatening to burst into the open, dragging with it huge issues of press freedom, equality before the law and the dignity – possibly even the survival – of the crown. But wait. If the press were less fascinated by the royal family’s dirty laundry people wouldn’t need to get injunctions. As the judge said, matters of family and personal reputation are at stake here. And before we jump to lurid conclusions, remember only two or perhaps three people actually know what happened. Of course it’s not fair – politicians volunteer for a life of public scrutiny whereas the poor royal family are born into it. But these days some of the royal family are down in the dirt with the politicians – an automatic result of the decision to hire political-style spin doctors. To really Machiavellian spin doctors the truth is whatever they can get to stick. For royal folk – able to control so much of their lives - the truth is often just what they say it is. Mix spin doctors and royalty together and no wonder truth becomes an optional extra. Perhaps we should just avert our eyes from another royal embarrassment. But the reason we can’t and shouldn’t look away is the same reason the judge gave us for not looking at all. Family and personal reputations are at stake but it cuts both ways. It won’t have escaped the judge’s attention – and the rest of us are unlikely to forget – that the royal “demand” has only been made on behalf of one family. Let’s hope it’s the right one. SELECTED ROYAL JOURNALISM by Patrick Jephson NOT INTENDED FOR REPUBLICATION OR SALE Page | 181 Download 240.66 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling