We’re Expanding: the Future of Byline

In 2016 we inherited a site from the founders of Byline.com which – by this point – was the only major surviving crowdfunded news site left. The market leaders, Contributoria and Beacon Reader, were closing with massive losses.
The Cairncross Report: what it says and first impressions
These decent proposals for helping public service journalism are worryingly vulnerable to manipulation by corporate press bosses and their ministerial friends
Phone hacking: time the police stepped in
Evidence against executives and editors is piling up in the civil courts, but newspapers are just buying their way out of trouble. The right place for this is the criminal courts, which means the Met must act
Alternative Solutions to the Prisons Crisis: How Life Coaching Inmates Can Empower Them to Escape a Failing System
We can’t wait for the Government to make our crisis-hit prisons places of change. Meet the charity that’s helping prisoners to transform their lives and stay out of them.
The Cairncross Review and the crisis in journalism
Can Dame Frances Cairncross find a way of subsidising journalism without giving ministers the power to syphon money to their corrupt press chums – and without enabling Big Tech to buy itself freedom from scrutiny?
Exclusive:Date set for Judicial Review of state pensions for 50s born women
A court date has been agreed for the BackTo60 campaign to challenge the government over the raising of the state pension age for 3.9 million 50s born women with Michael Mansfield QC taking the case to the Department of Work and Pensions.
Novichoc: From Russia with Love
The gift of chocolate models of Salisbury Cathedral to well wishers by Russian state TV must be the sickest message sent out in the season of goodwill.
Theresa May’s mental health act reform: Warm words but scant action
With virtually nil national coverage Theresa May’s commissioned report on reforming the mental health act- the first for 30 years – was released last month. But it is a tame review acknowledging there is institutional racism in mental health but offering no solutions.
A Duty to Inform, as well as Entertain: The BBC On the Edge of an Abyss
2018 has been a troubling year for those who support public service broadcasting and the national broadcaster’s remit to INFORM not just entertain.
Britain’s nuclear future: Doomed by its own contractors and skill shortages
After anti-nuclear campaigners spent decades trying to stop new nuclear power stations, will Britain’s £70 billion new build programme come crashing down anyway because the contractors have walked out and a huge skill shortage make it impossible to build them.
Racism in the press: lessons of the Raheem Sterling case
Calls for change from within the press are welcome but will make no lasting difference. The only workable remedy is effective, independent regulation that takes racism seriously
Andrew Norfolk of the Times: more bad journalism
The reporter who got things spectacularly wrong over ‘Muslim foster care’ has offered another lesson in what journalists should not do
Permission granted: 50s Women win historic case to judicial review on pension rights
The campaign group for 50s women who lost their pensions have won the right to have a judicial review into the government’s handling of the raising of the pension age from 60 to 65
‘I would have camped outside that prison every single day’, says mother of bullied teenager who hanged himself in his cell
Liz Hardy, whose son Jake committed suicide in 2012, spoke at the launch of a campaign to End Child Imprisonment in England.
‘If prisoners don’t have human rights, none of us do’
Prisoners are particularly vulnerable to abuse and neglect, says a former Chief Inspector of Prisons.
Last of the Summer Time: The next new EU row for Theresa May
Now that the UK is about to sign the withdrawal agreement – the next row will be about what the EU could impose on us during the transition period and it could explode over a proposed directive to abolish British summer time
Putin’s Plot to Destroy the West PART I – Dark Money and Data in Brexit and Trump Campaigns
An occasional series to accompany the UNTOLD: Dial M for Mueller podcasts with Carole Cadwalldr, and why Britain needs an FBI style investigation
Exclusive: Amber Rudd faces new challenge over maladministration of the raising of pension age from 50s Women
Two of the 50s women denied a pension have got backing from a top pensions lawyer in their fight against maladministration by the government over the raising of the state pension age.
Trial date set for ” Nick ” the man accused of perverting the course of justice over the Westminster paedophile investigation
The date has been set for the trial of ” Nick” the man accused of perverting the course of justice over the Westminster VIP paedophile abuse
Facebook backs the wrong horse in UK local journalism
The tech giant’s £4.5m donation is good news, but boosting the firms that oversaw the devastation of the local press is a mistake
Establishment won’t destabilise a Corbyn government says author of “A Very British Coup”
Chris Mullin author of ” A very British Coup ” where a left wing Labour government is destabilised by the security services predicts it won’t happen to Jeremy Corbyn.
Can the Independent Child Sex Abuse Inquiry really properly investigate Elm Guest House?
Next March the Child Sexual Abuse inquiry will look again at Elm Guest House and whether there was a cover-up by the police to protect VIP clients who allegedly came there for gay sex possibly with children. It looks like the inquiry will not have the time or inclination to do a thorough job.
Arron Banks, UK sovereignty and £163,000 in tax
European law should trump the British Parliament, says the alleged money-man behind Brexit – at least when it comes to taxes on his UKIP donations
Days away: a new subsidy for our corrupt press
A likely Budget cut in VAT on online publications will be presented as a boost for journalism. In reality it is a bung for the pro-Tory billionaires behind the Mail, the Sun and the Telegraph
The toothless puppet rolls over for its masters (again)
‘We order you to print this correction on page 2,’ said IPSO. ‘We’d rather not,’ replied the Mail on Sunday. ‘Oh dear,’ said IPSO, ‘in that case page 8 will do.’
MPs slam complacent equality watchdog and the government over “rife ” ageist discrimination
MPs on the Women and Equalities Committee have slammed both the government and the Equality watchdog for complacency in allowing rife discrimination in the workplace for the over 50s
‘Home Secretary not fit to hold office after “secretive deal to appease Donald Trump’s lust for blood” on death penalty’, says top QC
Sajid Javid’s decision not to oppose the death penalty for two Islamic State members is a “dramatic reversal” of British policy, according to Ben Emmerson.
Exclusive: Case for Judicial Review for BackTo60 challenge to government on pensions set for November 30
The High Court today granted a two hour hearing for BackTo60 group to put their case for a judicial review into the mishandling of the raising of the pension age for 50s women.
Danger on the Line: Damning safety findings that put passengers and train drivers at risk
A spate of potentially very serious rail accidents involving stranded trains suggest that the passenger and driver safety is at risk from systemic failures in Britain’s semi privatised railways.
The day the women fighting for their pensions brought Westminster to a standstill
A vibrant demonstration by hundreds of women protesting about the raising of the pension age brought Westminster to a halt yesterday when they blocked the road round Parliament square for an hour.
‘It’s time for a public inquiry into prisons crisis’, former chief inspector tells politicians
Professor Nick Hardwick gave evidence to Parliament’s Justice Committee on the prison population and ‘planning for the future’.
Conservatives v Corbyn: How the Tory party’s policy vacuum has left them floundering among the under 45s
Away from the media scrum of Boris versus Theresa May on Brexit, the Tory Party conference is doing a lot of soul searching about how it can attract back the droves of people under 45 who have deserted it for Labour.
Boycott this mean Treasury National Savings ISA account that is slashing interest rates for pensioners and the poor
The recent bank rate rise was supposed to see a rise in interest rates for savers. But instead the Treasury and National Savings plotted to use the period to slash interest rates on an instant cash isa used by people to put aside savings for emergencies. The National Saving isa should be boycotted.
Exposed: The worldwide hypocritical stance by successive UK ministers on women’s rights and their pensions
An expert report to be submitted to the High Court next month as part of a judicial review brought by BackTo60 group says the UK is in breach of its international obligations over the treatment of 1950s women who face a wait of up to 6 years to get their state pension.
How to support ‘high quality journalism’
Public subsidy for journalism can only be justified if that journalism is effectively regulated to keep standards high. My submission to the government review
IMPRESS dismisses complaint of intimidation, malice and invasion of privacy from child sex abuse survivor
The press regulator, Impress, have dismissed a complaint against Byline from a child sexual abuse survivor who was named in passing in a blog – sealing a precedent that survivors who have gone public can’t then ban selected journalists from reporting their name provided no new details are published
Suspicious deaths of the elderly in hospital: An appeal for people to contact me
Since the publication of the Gosport War Memorial Independent Panel inquiry into the untimely deaths of 456 people there I have been contacted by a number people across the country alleging similar situations. I would like more people to contact me as part of a bigger investigation,
Full text of official summary of final judgment in ‘Muslim fostering’ case
This summary, issued by Tower Hamlets local authority on the instructions of the judge, has been accepted by every party in the case
‘Muslim fostering’: Times journalism utterly discredited
The story caused a sensation but quickly fell under a cloud of doubt. Now the release of the final court judgment in the case leaves the newspaper’s reputation in shreds and surely puts senior journalists’ jobs on the line
Boris Johnson, his marriage and me
I detest him as much as anyone does, but I’d rather we left his relationship with his wife out of it
Sam Allardyce, the Telegraph and another IPSO failure
Read the press and you’d think the sting had been vindicated. Cut through IPSO’s tangled prose, however, and you find the truth is otherwise
Fifty Shades of Child Abuse: How a brave survivor is pioneering a fight back in Cumbria
A child sex abuse survivor who was a the victim of the notorious paedophile John Allen in the North Wales children’s home scandal is pioneering in Cumbria a way to help similar survivors using an American method approved by the World Health Organisation. He has just written a book about it.
If you don’t want the Daily Mail and the Sun to receive public subsidies you need to say so now
A public consultation on future funding of journalism closes on 14 September. It’s a government device to give taxpayers’ money to their press friends. Please let them know you object
Chaos at Birmingham Prison revealed: “Every day was a party. But boredom leads to badness”
A report into a riot at HMP Birmingham in 2016 exposes the scale of the problems facing the G4S-run prison – more than a year before the Government announced it would be stepping in to take over.
Why these liars, cheats and fraudsters should be prosecuted for ripping off taxpayers and cheating London’s firefighters
The Serious Fraud Office should prosecute the people who ran the first flawed privatisation of London and Lincolnshire fire services, for fraud after a damning report from the Financial Reporting Council reveals they were liars and cheats and stripped them from practising as chartered accountants.
Premier Bin: Is the minimum wage hotel chain run by Whitbread millionaires and promoted by Lenny Henry going to the dump?
A big promise for workers after Brexit is that the low paid will get higher wages as companies become more desperate to recruit. From anecdotal evidence at Premier Inn in Edinburgh customers will get poorer service and staff will have to work harder instead.
‘Justice Secretary must put right mess he made’, says former chair of parole board sacked over John Worboys controversy
EXCLUSIVE: Nick Hardwick gives Byline his reaction to a High Court ruling which found that his sacking over the John Worboys case by the Justice Secretary was “not acceptable” as it breached the latter’s duty to uphold judicial independence.
A No Deal Brexit could leave nearly 500,000 expatriate Brits with frozen pensions like those living in Canada and Australia
The ratcheting up of a No Deal Brexit scenario could leave 500,000 Brit expat pensioners losing their annual up rating and end up like ex pat pensioners living in increasingly poverty stricken circumstances in Australia and Canada.
Judicial Review of government’s handling of 50s women pension changes lodged at High Court
The first step to try and recover pensions lost for 50s women was taken just before the courts closed today. It will be the start of a long process.
Bishop Peter Ball:Time for the Church of England to take a lead on stamping out child sex abuse
The horrifying hearings this week about sex offender Bishop Peter Ball and the duping of Prince Charles mean it is now time for the Church of England to act to stamp out sexual abuse.
Brexit Bombshell: All Northern Ireland people would be better off in a new united Ireland says new report
An economist’s report commissioned by the joint committee for the implementation of the Good Friday agreement says everybody in N Ireland would be better off in a united Ireland inside the EU. No wonder Irish diplomats did not want it released.
The press and Sir Cliff: they have no idea
The response of editors to the judgment shows them out of touch with the public and digging an ever-deeper hole of contempt for their journalism
Why there should be no Cliff’s Law following the chilling judgement by Mr Justice Mann
Proposals for a new law to guarantee anonymity to suspects for sexual abuse offences in the wake of the chilling judgement by Mr Justice Mann over the BBC’s coverage of the raid on Sir Cliff Richard’s home are wrong.
Revealed: The £271 billion “rape” of the National Insurance Fund that deprived 50s women of their state pension
The Treasury has saved a staggering £271 billion by stopping its contribution to the National Insurance Fund which has left 50s women waiting up to six years for a pension
Theresa May did the bidding of the press, now they call her a traitor
She used up capital cancelling Leveson 2 for them, but it did not buy her favourable coverage. She is the corporate papers’ ever-willing victim: the more she appeases them, the harder they kick her
Race equality groups seek big changes to the mental health act to end stereotyping and overmedication
Race equality groups have combined to demand changes to the mental health act which is the subject of a little known review ordered by Theresa May and due to report later this year
Nick and allegations of the Westminster paedophile ring : The perversion of justice charge sheet
The Crown Prosecution Service has decided there is enough evidence to charge ” Nick” the 50 year old man, who accused prominent politicians, military figures and a TV presenter of child sexual abuse, of perverting the course of justice.
Whitehall’s shameful database of women’s pathetic state pensions
A Whitehall database of the nation’s state pensions accessed by Which? Money reveals the dire and unequal state of women’s pensions in contrast to the rosy picture presented by the DWP itself.
Revealed: The next bill for the over 40s: Your social care tax
Yesterday MPs from the Commons health and local government committees proposed a new tax to pay for social care – aimed to protect the millennials from paying for pensioners. But the new Social Care Premium funding plan has too many flaws.
A dose of reality about IPSO for Matt Hancock
‘Even a cursory consideration shows it does not meet the requirements,’ says the Press Recognition Panel – after the Culture Secretary told us IPSO was just great
Nearly two-thirds of short-term prisoners have drug and alcohol problems and 70% reoffend within a year, new figures show
The statistics, obtained by charity Revolving Doors, demand a radical new approach towards persistent, low-level offenders whose crimes are linked to their drug and alcohol misuse, it says
Revealed: The £200,000 food bank warehouse in Amber Rudd’s Hastings constituency caused by the Universal Credit debacle
A damning report on the universal credit debacle reveals hardship for claimants, huge extra costs for voluntary services and food banks and is not even saving the government any money.
Official figures reveal a disturbing rise in right wing extremism among UK youth
The violent demonstration in London in support of jailed right wing extremist Tommy Robinson follows official figures showing a rise again in right wing extremism among young men
The Downing Street state pension robbery
An investigation reveals successive governments have raided and underfunded the National Insurance Fund and the 50s generation of women pensioners are paying for it
Theresa May’s risky gamble with reforming an ” institutionally racist” mental health act
A conference on Friday will examine the issue of ” institutional racism ” in examining Theresa May’s planned reform of the current mental health act which has led to the disproportionate number of black and ethnic minority people being sectioned.
Fight to save the iconic Gay Hussar
A battle has started to save the iconic Gay Hussar restuarant in Soho,London – one of the capital’s infamous venues for Left wing plots and meetings between journos and their sources.
The “unrecognised scandal” of prison suicides: ‘Lots of people died needlessly where ministers were warned that would be the effect’
Many more prisoners took their own lives in prisons after staff numbers and resources were cut. Campaigners believe questions must be asked about political accountability for these deaths.
Celia Brackenridge: An outstanding sportswoman and a pioneering campaigner against sexual abuse in sport
One of the pioneering campaigners against sexual abuse in sport and an outstanding Olympian sportswoman sadly died yesterday
Matt Hancock makes himself ‘state approver’ of press arbitration
A week ago the corporate papers were screaming blue murder about threats of state control. Yet now the government has given itself a real power over them they are silent
Esther Baker case: How the child sex abuse inquiry itself abused survivors’ trust and privacy
The public release of details of one child sex abuse survivor’s case including false information against her that had to be deleted is a damning indictment of the behaviour of the independent child sex abuse inquiry and a breach of trust for vulnerable people who should expect to be protected.
Taking the 50s women protest to the doors of the Department of Work and Pensions
The 50s women took to the streets of London on their own battlebus to protest about the government witholding their pensions and raising the pension age.
Health and safety watchdog inspects dangerous prisons as staff assaults rocket to record highs
EXCLUSIVE: The Health and Safety Executive inspected prisons at the end of 2017 in response to assaults on prison officers continuing to increase.
Take time to smell the roses: Bulgarians love bomb London to counter British hate media
In a gesture to thank the UK, Bulgarians planted their national rose in a London square. They also submitted a report to London’s mayor, Sadiq Khan, debunking the media’s myths about them.
Leveson 2: they stooped very low to conquer
In the end, none of the arguments mattered, because the Tories had already struck an outlandish and disgraceful deal with the DUP
Government narrowly defeat plan for second Leveson inquiry after a deal with the DUP
A decision to set up a second inquiry by Lord Leveson is on a knife edge today – and could depend on the capricious behaviour of MPs
Local papers cry wolf when there is no danger
Trusted local titles are being used by the corporate press to send out false distress signals even though they have nothing to fear from Leveson reforms
Feted in Mayfair but flouted by Nuneaton: The extraordinary Labour local election performance
The local election results have left Labour in an extraordinary bind. Contrary to the general coverage by mainstream media they have gained seats in places only Tony Blair could dream about. But their traditional white working class support has webbed away via UKIP to the Tories.
Eight reasons why Leveson 2 must go ahead
This is about trust, democracy, freedom, justice, constitutional propriety and the future of journalism
Local Elections 2018: Reality triumphs over expectation
This year’s local elections look like a stalemate but both Labour and the Liberal Democrats have made progress in the last year. The Tories have been partially buoyed up by UKIP voters switching to them.
Leveson reforms back before Parliament
MPs have a chance to put Part 2 of the Leveson inquiry back on track next week, and the vote is too close to call
Revealed: Dishonest Eurostar’s disabled unfriendly direct service to Amsterdam
The new direct London to Amsterdam Eurostar service is not what it is cracked up to be – and if you are disabled don’t travel on it because they can’t provide the support
IPSO and arbitration: don’t get fooled again
After promising million-pound fines, front-page corrections and tough investigations – none of which happened – the sham regulator says it will offer ‘compulsory’ arbitration. We’d be mad to trust it
IPSO’s latest season of calamities
Damned in an official report, exposed as useless by a select committee, incapable of tackling flagrant press dishonesty, caught cherry-picking complaints – the sham press regulator is blundering between disasters
Nick Hardwick lifts the lid on the John Worboys case: ‘Justice Secretary sacked me to save his own skin’
EXCLUSIVE: Former chair of the Parole Board, Nick Hardwick, speaks to Byline about his sacking, the repercussions of the John Worboys case and what it reveals about our conception of justice.
Britain: Sleep walking into the valley of death
Since the coalition in 2011 both the annual death rate and the number of deaths have increased reversing a trend lasting 50 years. And the growth in life expectancy is slowing. Is austerity to blame?
The Crime Live event – “Real Life” Silent Witness but no time for sexual liaisons
Crime Live – a ” real life” Silent Witness event next month – highlights how huge strides in forensic science could conflict with police cuts leading to miscarriages of justice if people are not vigilant according to Inside Justice, a charity taking up cases.
Rochdale child sex abuse: A 30 year scandal that the authorities failed to stop
The devastating report from the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse goes well beyond Sir Cyril Smith lasting decades and senior figures in the town share a lot of the blame
Postponed by Brexit: Vital investigations into the effectiveness of Britain’s border controls
David Bolt, independent chief inspector of borders and immigration announced over Easter that he was postponing investigations into border controls following the failures of ministers to sort out Brexit negotiations, notably over the Irish border
A warning for Grenfell Tower survivors
The inquiry into the disaster has two parts, with the toughest questions due in part 2. But will part 2 ever happen? The example of Leveson 2 says no
How IPSO cherry-picks complaints
The tame press ‘regulator’ faces a court challenge about the way it dismisses some complaints because they are made by the wrong people
Dacre and the Lawrence case: another problem with facts
The Daily Mail editor has been quoted saying something strikingly at odds with his own testimony to the Leveson Inquiry
Shambolic Stansted: How you can grab duty free booze without leaving the country unchecked by short staffed customs and immigration
A damning report on the state of the border force at Stansted Airport by an independent inspector reveals how you can even get away with buying duty free stuff there without needing to fly and get away with it.
‘Introduce presumption against “super short” prison sentences to tackle reoffending’, says Shadow Justice Secretary
Labour MP Richard Burgon believes tough community sentences should be considered as an alternative to prison for offenders who would serve just a few weeks or months inside
Voldemort Grayling: The transport secretary and his fantasy Hogwarts Express train service
Just before Easter a National Audit Office investigation revealed that the Tories had lied to the voters in the June general election promising electrification schemes that they had already cancelled. They also promise new trains that don’t yet exist to replace them None of this made much in msm.
The Cairncross Review: it’s about subsidising the press
Behind Culture Secretary Matt Hancock’s bold claims about making high-quality journalism sustainable is a sleazy scheme to give public money to the Mail, the Mirror and the Murdoch press
Department for Work and Pensions postpones new nasty for poverty stricken pensioners until 2019
The new nasty plan by the DWP to change the rules for claiming pension credit which could halve the income of poorest pensioners has been postponed until 2019 because of Whitehall’s failure and incompetence in getting universal credit rolled out in time.
Vote Leave and Cambridge Analytica: A stench enveloping Downing Street and the Cabinet’s hard Brexiteers
The growing scandal over data harvesting and breaching electoral law on campaign funding has reached Downing Street with a disgraceful and botched attempt to discredit the latest whistleblower revealing a potential cover up by Vote Leave. It can only get worse for the government.
Are Britain’s Green guardians clueless on future investments for this country post Brexit?
The sale of the Green Investment Bank brought easy money for the government and the City but little for the environment. Now it looks as though those who were supposed to safeguard green investment are pretty toothless.
New Podcast from the Makers of Untold: the Daniel Morgan Story
The team who made the Daniel Morgan Murder story go viral return with another series about hacking, media and politics – but on a global scale.
Tories to implement new nasties for next generation of poverty stricken pensioners
The calamities befalling the over 50s women denied a pension until they are 65 or 66 are about to get worse with government saving millions on cold weather payouts and denying some people pension credit until they are 76.
A former top Unison official slammed by a judge selected to be a new Labour councillor for one of London’s deprived wards
Linda Perks, a former Unison top official, who was severely criticised by a judge for union rule breaking over the election of Dave Prentis, its general secretary, has now been selected as a Labour candidate for a safe council seat in a deprived part of Greenwich.
Leveson 2: the Guardian has no case
After endorsing the cancellation of an inquiry into its own corrupt and untrusted industry, the paper offers only obfuscations and distractions
The Daily Mail, Max Mosley and me
The Mail’s obsessive campaign against Max Mosley is a hypocritical bid to distract attention from its own wrongdoings
The Leveson 2 decision shows just how corrupt Britain is
Ministers have shamelessly put their own interests and those of their Murdoch and Mail cronies before those of the public
Phone Hacking: The Guardian should hang its head in shame over its stance on a second Leveson inquiry
My old employer The Guardian should hang its head in shame in putting forward such spurious reasons to drop Leveson 2. It has failed to support holding the media to account
The Guardian’s Leveson betrayal, line by line
This may well be the most intellectually dishonest and also the sloppiest Guardian editorial in decades
Janner’s family – and his accusers – denied core participation status in Westminster child sexual abuse inquiry
The Janner family whose father faced allegations of child sexual abuse have been denied core participant status at the Westminster strand of the independent child sex abuse inquiry but will have status in a separate inquiry looking at institutional responses to allegations against their father.
A psychiatrist’s damning indictment of 500 years of racism – now revived by Trump and 9/11
A new book by a consultant psychiatrist raises very awkward issues about racism in the UK and the US and the way psychiatrists and clinical psychologists treat BME people just as Theresa May wants to rewrite our mental health laws.
Select committee savages IPSO for failing to protect Muslims
Of 8,148 complaints about discrimination in the press in a year, the industry’s tame regulator upheld just one
50s pensioners: Time for you to put the boot into your local councillor at May’s elections
May’s local elections provide an ideal opportunity for the 50s pensioners to put their views across and throw out your local councillor if he or she doesn’t agree with you.
Gove takes the lead in a Whitehall Brexit spending spree to bypass Parliament
Whitehall mandarins have devised a neat way to spend a lot of your taxpayers money on Brexit and bypass any meaningful scrutiny by Parliament
Freedom & the local press: a CEO’s misleading message to readers
The boss of regional newspaper group Johnston has written a letter to readers that is packed with distortions
Revealed:The over budget safeguarding system that doesn’t know if your kids are safe from sexual predators
The National Audit Office has exposed another Whitehall bungle costing hundreds of millions – on a critical service aimed to protect children and vulnerable adults from predators- and the service doesn’t even know whether employers bar them.
50s Women:”Nobody will see their pension entitlement changed by more than 18 months” – Theresa May’s crass error
The Prime Minister appears to be totally ignorant of the fact that 3.8 million women pensioners are having to wait up to six years for their pension. She thinks it is a mere 18 months.
The PM’s journalism ‘review’: a job for Leveson 2
Unless it has the true independence of a public inquiry, Theresa May’s initiative will just be a gravy train for Dacre and Murdoch
Murdoch Admits to Targeting Daniel Morgan Murder Detective and Family
After six years of wrangling, NewsUK has admitted that News of the World hacked and surveilled the family of the detective leading the fourth murder inquiry into the involvement of their favourite private investigators, Southern Investigations, in the murder of Daniel Morgan
Rebekah Brooks and the stink that won’t go away
Her company may be offering ‘sincere apologies’ in court, but the newspaper boss still hasn’t explained why a police officer’s family was targeted
IMPRESS reject arbitration and compensation claim from ex MP over Esther Baker investigation story
A request for arbitration and compensation to the press regulator, IMPRESS, by former Liberal Democrat MP John Hemming over the Esther Baker case has been rejected by the regulator.
Elm Guest House: Child Sexual Abuse Inquiry to probe whether there was a conspiracy or cover up
Elm Guest House look like at being at the heart of a possible cover up in the long awaited investigation into how institutions handled allegations of child sexual abuse against prominent people in Westminster.
How angry 50s women deprived of a pension can boot their MP out of a job
A House of Commons library report provides ample evidence for campaigners who want to fight the government over the rising pensions age to target and unseat MPs. And it is the Conservatives who are most vulnerable
Why the shabbily treated 50’s women pensioners must go on the offensive and win back their money
A report by me out today commissioned by One Voice #BackTo60 group makes the case for lowering the pension age again. Now people have to get on and challenge all the main parties over this issue.
Designer label Dudes: Beware of a new police ” street strip and search ” plan for Rotterdam
Rotterdam Police are planning to try and clampdown on suspected criminals and drug dealers by confiscating their designer clothes and making them strip off in the street
Does the demise of UKIP offer a lifeline to embattled Tories?
The final implosion of UKIP could come this weekend – but the main beneficiaries – according to the latest council by election results – are the Tories rather than Labour
A day of shame for Britain’s corporate press
Two events in one day demonstrate the corrupt power of the press bosses – and their lack of accountability
‘Prison officers do want to do a good job, but it’s like asking someone to build a Rolls Royce and giving them a hammer and chisel’
The Government’s rhetoric on reforming our prisons – without any significant investment – is “garbage”, according to the boss of the Prison Officers Association
The Great £300m Probation Bail Out: You Pay, They Prey
On Wednesday two top civil servants appear before MPs to justify why they are spending £300m bailing out private companies providing a useless service to rehabilitate ex prisoners and putting the public at risk
Leveson: Theresa May gets her facts wrong
The Prime Minister says press reforms backed by the Lords threaten local papers. But locals already have a special opt-out– thanks to measures she helped sponsor
The new culture secretary gets it all wrong first time
Matt Hancock had to choose between the interests of a corrupt national press and those of the people he serves. One tweet gave his preference away
LEVESON 2: 10 LIES TO IGNORE AND TWO QUESTIONS TO ASK
A decision on the second part of the inquiry into the press is imminent and the corporate papers are cranking up the disinformation. Here is an antidote
Peter Preston: An appreciation
My tribute to Peter Preston who appointed me to the Guardian way back in 1976.
Time to bin Keep Britain Tidy
England has had the worst problem of litter among developed nations for over a decade – time to ditch the rump of a charity leading the campaign and go for policies that will force big companies who cause the problem to pay to solve it.
We are one signature away from a revolution in access to justice
A law has already been passed giving every citizen the right to affordable justice in libel and privacy. Culture Secretary Karen Bradley just has to sign it
Blog in 2017: The Grenfell tragedy has resurrected the madness of fire privatisation
Dodgy fire privatisers, collapsing Tory membership, allegations of fixing the election of Dave Prentis, Unison general secretary were all stories ignored by the mass media last year but covered on byline.com and my own blog
Have the Tories already sold our future green investments down the dump?
The government sold off the state owned Green Investment Bank too cheaply and gave the private equity company Macquirie new freedoms to invest most of its new projects outside the UK. It is already taking advantage with little scrutiny.
Power corrupts, but Rupert Murdoch corrupts absolutely
Amid all the giddy excitement about the Disney deal, Tamara Holder reminded us what matters most: this man’s companies wreck lives
The top Tory power grab that turns their party members into mere pawns
While the Tories row about Brexit their top party apparatchiks have started a power grab that will mean ordinary members will be stripped of their involvement by changing the party’s constitution according to documents obtained by Tribune and Byline.com
Arguing for prison reform without addressing victims’ concerns about crime a ‘mistake’, says chair of parole board
Part 2: An interview with Nick Hardwick, Chair of the Parole Board and former Chief Inspector of Prisons
‘The way things are now in prisons reflect very badly on us as a country’, says Chair of Parole Board
Part 1: An interview with Nick Hardwick, Chair of the Parole Board and former Chief Inspector of Prisons
Trust in print journalism: it’s low and that matters
A battery of data show trust at pitiful levels. Journalists need to wake up before it’s too late
Trust, newspapers and journalists: a review of evidence
Is trust in journalism really declining? Which journalists are trusted least? Does it matter? Making sense of what the surveys tell us
Child sex abuse:How Lady Macur exonerated the Waterhouse inquiry over convicted paedophile Gordon Anglesea
While all eyes were on Brexit the Wales Office slipped out a revised version of the report by Lady Macur into child sex abuse in North Wales. It reveals her findings on paedophile Gordon Anglesea – exonerating the work of a previous inquiry which let him off the hook.
IPSO’s badge of dishonour: some alternatives
With a little redrafting, the sham regulator’s new ‘kitemark’ tells a more realistic story
Paul Settle: a tragic case of a traumatised former senior Met police officer who is lashing out at politicians and child abuse survivors
The former detective chief inspector who led the Westminster paedophile investigation says he was hounded out of office for speaking his mind. He has also disclosed that he was suffering from post traumatic stress disorder from previous work while conducting such a difficulti nquiry.
Boris Johnson says Stop Funding Hate is working
A point-by-point commentary on the Foreign Secretary’s attempt to deter campaigners against newspaper hate speech
Are you a terrorist if you have a copy of the Vietnam protesters’ Anarchists Cookbook ( published 1971)?
The excellent Inforrm’s Blog carries an extraordinary piece on an Aberystwyth student who was put on trial for terrorism by owning a copy of The Anarchists Cookbook published nearly 50 years ago. Acquitted by the jury after three days. I wonder whether a Muslim student would have been so lucky
Unreported by MSM: How some bosses can help if you are one of 2 million people enduring domestic abuse
A major new initiative to get employers on board to help their employees cope with domestic abuse was highlighted at a conference hosted by the BBC. Unfortunately none of the national nor social media reported it.
IPSO, Trevor Kavanagh and a licence to abuse minorities
The Sun columnist has humiliated the puppet regulator and everyone associated with it
Hypocrisy and double standards: How a Tory flagship council denies the ” just about managing ” their new homes
Philip Hammond, the Chancellor, announced today big measures to help ordinary people get on the housing ladder. Tory run Westminster Council has just approved a plan to deny more ordinary people to get homes
Exclusive: Are whistleblowers now too frit to reveal when NHS patients and care home residents are in danger?
The number of whistleblowers in the NHS and care homes reporting safeguarding issues has dropped dramatically in the same year as the Care Quality Commission finally acted to create a national guardian to protect staff who warned of dangers to patients
Exclusive: How newly found “destroyed” papers revive the mystery of the notorious gay and paedophile Elm Guest House
Inquest Papers claimed to have been destroyed have emerged 27 years later querying whether Carole Kasir killed herself or was killed re-opening the question of the role of the notorious Elm Street quest house in south wesr London
The Times and the Tower Hamlets foster care story: bad journalism
A tide of information suggests the report was inaccurate on essentials, omitted vital information and was poorly researched. The paper should come clean
Exclusive: Supreme Court ruling opens way for legal action against Michael Gove and Liz Truss for racial discrimination and victimisation
A virtually unreported ruling by the Supreme Court has removed immunity from the Equality Act for misconduct and disciplinary hearings opening the way for three judges and a former tribunal member to bring legal action against two former Lord Chancellors,six high court judges and tribunal heads
‘MURDERERS’, myths, Macpherson and the Daily Mail
Almost 25 years on from Stephen Lawrence’s murder, it’s time to ask whether the Mail really played the pivotal and progressive role it likes to claim
Hillsborough Families:Patronised to death by the disdain of the powerful
A highly critical and moving report by the Rt Rev James Jones, former Bishop of Liverpool,calls for cultural change in Britain to deal with tragedies like Hillsborough and Grenfell Tower and is highly critical of the patronising disposition of a powerful elite to families’ pain and suffering.
For the corporate press, persecuting minorities is the new privacy intrusion
Their bread-and-butter activity used to be poking around in people’s personal lives. Now it is monstering Muslims, foreigners and anyone else they think of as different *
Nuclear decommissioning: How Whitehall turned toxic waste into a dirty mess
One of Whitehall’s biggest contracts to clean up 10 decommissioned nuclear power stations and two research centres has turned into a complete debacle and has wasted hundreds of millions of pounds
Victims must be given greater voice in criminal justice system, urges mother of teenager killed by man on probation
Nadine Marshall is calling for greater transparency and support for victims of serious crimes and for more accountability in the reformed probation service
How you will soon be paying for Trident on your electricity bill
Civil Servants have admitted for the first time that the extremely expensive new nuclear power station at Hinkley Point is linked to Britain’s Trident nuclear missile programme and you will be paying some of the costs on your electricity bill.
KAREN BRADLEY GETS IT WRONG FIVE TIMES
Back in 2013 she voted for the Leveson reforms. Now, as she struggles to justify ditching them, she relies on . . . let’s call them ‘errors’
Time for MPs to take back control of Parliament
MPs should give John Bercow, the Speaker, the full support for an important Parliamentary reform to give them a much greater say over government legislation particularly as Theresa May does not have a majority and Brexit must be properly examined.
Latest court bid by corporate press to wreck Leveson ends in humiliation
How can press bosses justify these costly legal failures at a time when print sales are in freefall and they are closing local papers by the fistful?
Footballer Justin Fashanu and the Westminster “back to basics” sex scandals
Forbidden Games,is a new film about the tragic life and death of Britain’s first millionaire black footballer, Justin Fashanu, He outed himself as gay in The Sun and then became embroiled in the seedier side of Westminster life, including a relationship with David Atkinson, a married Tory MP.
Sir Edward Heath: Paedophile or No Paedophile?
Wiltshire Police were right to investigate the allegations of child sexual abuse against Sir Edward Heath and their inquiry is both fair and proportionate. But it has left the issue in limbo.
Theresa May’s wasted £11.2 billion of taxpayers money on initiatives Tory youth doesn’t want
The Tories move to outbid Jeremy Corbyn with new spending initiatives for the youth vote has bombed -even with their own young Tory supporters
Exclusive: Tories face “oblivion” says party campaigner as membership plummets to 100,000
Exclusive; The real figure for membership of the Tory Party has plummeted to 100,000 and a seasoned campaigner says they could face oblivion
Hidden in plain sight: Labour trains a new generation of political activists
After doubling the number of party members in Britain, the real task at this year’s Labour conference was training the next generation of activists to fight the next General Election.
How Jeremy Corbyn (with a little help from Tim Farron) brought political activism back from the living dead
Four years ago active political party membership was the lowest in British history. Now on the eve of the Labour Party conference it has been completely revitalised mainly by Jeremy Corbyn
Why Francis Maude and Amyas Morse are right to ginger up complacent Whitehall
The top of Whitehall needs a radical shake up and proposals by former Tory minister Lord Maude and Amyas Morse,, head of the National Audit Office, are on the right lines.
‘Private companies running failing probation services must be made publicly accountable’
Community Rehabilitation Companies supervising released prisoners should be stripped of their contracts, says probation workers’ union boss
London Midland admits it got it wrong over its passenger assistance service
London Midland have admitted all the faults in their assisted passenger services that left my disabled wife and I stranded without help and surrounded by a faulty lift and a failed passenger emergency help line at berkhamsted.
Can’t rely on London Midland:How staff cuts and technical failures dump on disabled and vulnerable rail passengers
Testing London Midland’s emergency phone lines for lifts and on a platform at a station with no staff – showed up the failure of the company to protect disabled and vulnerable passengers
MURDOCH PAPER MAKES THE CASE FOR LEVESON 2
And no, although the corporate press are desperate to avoid a public examination of who was to blame for the criminality in their ranks, Part Two of the Leveson Inquiry has not been scrapped
Esther Baker child sex abuse case: “Insufficent evidence”to prosecute as accused ex MP outs himself “
The Crown Prosecution Service say there is insufficient evidence to prosecute people following allegations by Esther Baker that she was abused by among others an ex Liberal Democrat MP, who yesterday outed himself as John Hemming, former MP for Birmingham, Yardley.
The £20,000 benefit bonus rewards for the metropolitan elite at the Department of Work and Pensions
The controversy over £20,000 bonuses paid to five top civil servants at the Department for Work and Pensions for running a much hated benefit system shows up the enormous divide between the Metropolitan elite and the provincial poor.
Edintfest: 70 years of challenge and innovation
The Edinburgh International Festival – often overshadowed by the more famous fringe – is 70 years old this year. This is why it is worth going to see their productions as well going to the fringe.
A message for Sun advertisers: please stop
Either you support and profit from messages of hatred or you don’t. You can’t fudge this
Mainstream news media have earned the distrust they complain of
A long analysis in the Observer blames everyone but the mainstream media themselves for low public trust – demonstrating the complacency and denial in the industry
The train driver who averted a major disaster on a London commuter line in nine seconds
While the debate on whether we need drivers and guards on trains continues,this report shows why we need both if we are to have a safe railway
The collapse of the local press: A disaster facing local democracy
The Grenfell fire was a catalyst which highlighted the disastrous state of the local press which is now so damaging to local democracy.
Why journalists must report other journalists’ failures
. . . and why the public must complain if they think that’s not happening
Newspapers: how near is the end?
A central feature of British life for more than two centuries, the printed morning newspaper will soon disappear for good. And it looks as though some of the biggest names will be the next to go.
The £5 billion pay out to people who shouldn’t have received it
Some £5bn has been wrongfully paid out to benefit claimants and the low paid because neither the Department of Work and Pensions and HM Revenue and Customs were up to the job.
Uncork the Gauke: Could the Tories go for another grey man to lead the party – like John Major
With Westminster lobby hacks feverishly speculating on who will become Tory leader after Theresa May – one person overlooked is David Gauke. Could history repeat the deposing of Thatcher in 1990 by a party desperate to stay in power.
Revealed: The man who sacked a woman on maternity leave is now head campaigner for women’s equality in Scotland
A Glasgow employment tribunal has criticised a former chief executive of the Scottish Refugee Council for sacking a woman employee on maternity leave. He has now got a top job championing the rights of women for the Equality and Human Rights Commission.
Exclusive: How the Boundary Commission could smash the Tory DUP love in
The fragile Conservative and DUP partnership could be smashed apart next year if the current proposals for big changes in Northern Ireland Parliamentary seats go ahead – cutting the number of DUP MPs from 10 to 7 and boosting Sinn Fein to 9.
You are paying £2.5m to keep this tram train in a depot
Britain’s first tram train project has ended up costing nearly five times more than projected, has yet to go into service and has left the rolling stock languishing in the depot.
Gag, cover up and secret privatisation: What is the real story behind the NHS clinical correspondence scandal
There were two scandals in the recent missing 700,000 NHS clinical correspondence documents – the loss of sensitive information that was never delivered to GPs and the attempt by a private company to frustrate the National Audit Office thoroughly investigate.
Revealed: The bucolic wine buff accountant who let privatisation spivs fiddle London fire brigade
The accountant who was fined £120,000 for professional misconduct after being duped by privatisation spivs over the privatisation of London’s fire engines. He now lives in rural Oxfordshire and is a fine wine buff.
Equal Pay,Unequal Misery: Unison and the Durham Teacher Assistants’ Dispute
The long running dispute by Durham teaching assistants who faced losses of up to £5000 on a £14,000 to £20,000 salary is still boiling over after Unison rushed through a deal during their annual conference – which has triggered protests from their members after 22 pc will be worse off.
Murdoch’s Corporate Knowledge of the Daniel Morgan Murder and Misleading Parliament
More detail from the Untold: the Daniel Morgan Murder Exposed book which shows that News Corp had extensive knowledge of criminal activity, funded it regardless, and misled parliament about the extent of their knowledge
The Daniel Morgan Murder: Why Murdoch Should Not Pass Ofcom’s Fit and Proper Test
As we await Culture Secretary’s decision on Rupert Murdoch’s bid for Sky, some revelations from the Daniel Morgan Murder podcast and book should stop the acquisition outright
An Establishment cover up: The sordid and sad saga of sex abuser Bishop Peter Ball
The report on Bishop Peter Ball is a devastating indictment of the Church of England. Both the abuse and cover up are appalling. But it also raises issues on homosexuality in the Church.
Will May’s terrorism clampdown restrict freedom of speech?
The recent terrorist atrocities has led Theresa May to say she may curb some civil liberties to defeat terrorism. People should scrutinise the Queen’s Speech to see what happens as this Commons research paper shows grave difficulties in doing this.
Revealed: Thousands of Britain’s top bankers become Euro millionaires while workers pay clipped to 1 per cent
A House of Commons library paper released a day after the general election revealed there has been a boom in top bankers pay during the austerity regime of David Cameron ,Nick Clegg and George Osborne while workers pay was either frozen or allowed to rise by just 1 per cent.
Towering Inferno: Grenfell Tower Fire
There must a full national investigation into this appalling tragedy and heads must roll – the council’s role in ignoring and threatening residents who warned of fire safety concerns must be put under vigorous scrutiny
Election 2017: the failures of journalism
British journalism could learn from its mistakes in covering the election, but will it?
Jeremy Corbyn’s biggest victory: Revitalising democracy
Every political party leader should thank Jeremy Corbyn for reviving an enthusiastic interest in politics among the young – this is the real legacy of this election.
Paul Dacre: colossus to dinosaur
For a year and more the Daily Mail’s editor towered over this country and a craven Tory party did his bidding. Now the electorate has stood up to him
Pollsters to lose tomorrow’s General Election
Never has there been such wildly different predictions for a general election by the pollsters. they can’t all be right- some are going to lose their reputation tomorrow
My billet-doux from Theresa: Push Brexit from the comfort of your own home and register your vote plan at Tory Central Office
By mistake I appear to have registered as a Tory supporter by the party for this election. Enjoy and read my billet doux from Theresa May
Unison’s Special Chocolate Biscuits Scandal: An insight into murky behaviour at the top of Britain’s biggest public sector union
A senior official in Unison, Britain’s biggest public sector union has been castigated by a judge for flagrantly breaching rules to re-elect Dave Prentis as general secretary. The judge
rejected demands for an election re-run only because she believed Dave Prentis did not know she had done it.
Revealed: Faked bills and dodgy deals How Assetco conned auditors and ripped off London and Lincoln’s firefighters
Following the huge fine given to Grant Thornton and Robert Napper, the Financial reporting Council reveal how Assetco fiddled the books using fake claims made to the London Fire Brigade.
Election 2017: Prim Headmistress v Cool Grandad
There has been a perceptible shift from the Tories to Labour during the campaign. How much of it is non political vibes now the voters can see both leaders in action? And do the young count?
Fined £3.5m for professional misconduct: Grant Thornton approved dishonest accounts for London and Lincolnshire’s privatised fire engines
One of the country’s leading accountants, Grant Thornton, have been fined and a retired partner disbarred for three years for professional misconduct in auditing a company that ran London and Lincolnshire’s privatised fire engines.
Police drop cases of men arrested on suspicion of stalking a child sexual abuse survivor
Met Police drop cases against a man accused of stalking a child sex abuse survivor and a woman journalist and another man after raiding his home.
Journalists in the US are fighting the problem. In the UK they are the problem
British journalism is failing democracy and our journalists don’t seem to care
Why the Tory plan to axe pensioners fuel benefits is as flawed as Labour’s Ed Balls up
The Tories are going to axe the winter fuel allowance- stealing Labour clothes in their 2015 manifesto. But it either won’t work or be deeply unfair and regressive.
The Tories hand the press their Get-Out-Of-Jail-Free card
Worse still: May’s promise to ditch Leveson 2 and cheap arbitration would give the corporate national papers carte blanche to breach our rights in future
Equality Commission facing waves of strikes from disgruntled staff
The bitter dispute over the sacking of disabled and black and ethnic minority staff by the Equality and Human Rights Commission continues with a month of strikes across Britain.
The Treasury: Destroying Britain’s world leadership in green technology
The dead hand of the Treasury has destroyed Britain’s chance to become a world leader in green technology
A damning indictment on the dangerous failure of privatisation in the criminal justice system by a former Tory MP
A practising criminal barrister and fortmer Tory MP , Jerry Hayes provides prima facie evidence on why the privatisation of the Forensic Science Service is leading to dangerous miscarriages of justice and should be reversed
Why Theresa May must ensure transparency between top politicians and big business during Brexit negotiations
Brexit will allow the City to make billions through currency speculation on the outcome of the talks. That is why the government must ensure full transparency of all financial relationships by ministers and their close relatives – starting with the current PM and her husband.
The arrogance of Daniel Janner over the future of the Child Sexual Abuse Inquiry
Daniel Janner QC wants the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse to be closed down and finds the chair incompetent. Why? Because it would not agree to dropping any investigation into allegations against his late father
Must a stellar Tory performance lead to Labour oblivion?
The Tories had a stellar victory in the local elections. Labour must fight back – one way might be to combine its vision for Britain with its vision for Brexit.
In despair? Maybe you are right to be. But let’s talk
Two brilliant events that look to the future
Tony Blair’s top donor goes Bercow
On the very last day of Parliament the speaker John Bercow has declared he has just received £20,000 in donations to fight his re-election campaign- two of them come from figures close to Tony Blair and Ed Miliband and were involved in the infamous ” Cash for Honours” scandal that went nowhere.
Three questions about the media that politicians must be asked
There is near-silence about the future of the media in this election, yet the winners must take momentous decisions about broadcasting and the press
Exclusive:Cabinet Office responds to allegations of Prime Minister’s Brexit ” conflict of interest “
Sources say the Cabinet Office Propriety and Ethics Team have launched an inquiry into whether there is a conflict of interest between Theresa May and her husband, Philip, over his job at the Capital Group, which makes millions of pounds in market sensitive information,including from Brexit.
How a Roman Catholic paedophile priest who mixed with celebs nearly escaped justice
A well respected Roman Catholic priest would have escaped justice for sexually abusing children if it had not been for the Met Police’s investigation into Elm Guest House as the Church itself swept it under the carpet other disclosures nearly 20 years ago.
Phone hacking: don’t let them fool you, most victims were ordinary people
Famous targets get the headlines but three-quarters of those illegally hacked by newspapers were people you’ve never heard of
A Whitehall management disaster that could wreck Britain’s trade deals after Brexit
The Whitehall agency charged with boosting Britain’s exports after Brexit has been exposed as being run by naive incompetents when it had to sign up to a contract itself.
Jeremy Corbyn: Can he break out from being caught between a rock and a hard place?
Jeremy Corbyn faces a huge uphill struggle to win the snap election. This is why he has to take the greatest risk and run a populist anti Establishment campaign.
The press and the election: four things we already know
This election could hand big corporate newspapers more power than they’ve ever had. But they’ll do all they can to drown out debate on the subject
How the Tories have fixed the road programme to maximise the motorist vote
The government is deliberately fixing the motorway and trunk road programme to coincide with maximising its vote among motorists
Lake Como’s little piece of paradise
For those wanting a break in beautiful and luxurious surroundings – this was a great place to stay- and forget the grim national and international situation. More pictures on my own blog site davidhencke.com
Independent Child Sexual Abuse Inquiry WILL investigate the late Greville Janner and whether there was a cover up
The Independent Child Sexual Abuse Inquiry will go ahead and investigate allegations against Lord Janner and whether there was a cover up in Parliament, the Labour Party and the security services if the allegations appear to be true.
Court hands ministers access-to-justice challenge
With ‘no-win-no-fee’ deals harder to get in libel cases, government must choose whether to back the corporate press or the ordinary citizen
Corporate press seeks to neuter the libel laws
if you thought today’s national press appeared unrestrained, just wait for tomorrow’s.
An inquiry into an inquiry: Will it uncover what went wrong when Ben Emmerson quit the Child Sexual Abuse inquiry?
The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse has quietly announced it had called in an employment judge to look at whether it has proper dignity at work practices after serious criticism from MPs over its handling of an allegation of sexual assault that has been categorically denied.
Should this powerful man both bankroll press standards and an editor that brought them into disrepute?
The resurrection of jailed Andy Coulson by Telegraph chief executive Murdoch MacLennan also reflects badly on the ethics of the Independent Press Standards Organisation and what is supposed to stand for.
Journalists v Journalists: Daily Mail suing Byline
Why is the Daily Mail suing Byline: is it in danger of becoming an enemy of the people itself or is this an attempt to stamp out a new kid on the block that investigates journalism and raises questions ignored elsewhere?
Why does this man keep secret the pay and perks for people running David Cameron’s taxpayer funded National Citizen Service scheme?
David Cameron’s former Downing Street adviser, Michael Lynas, is refusing to release the pay and perks for top people running his expensive legacy National Citizen Service programme for disadvantaged 15 to 17 year olds, despite an attempt by MPs to force his hand.
Thames Water: Unfit to protect our environment
The £20m fine for multiple pollution across four counties by Thames Water today provides real ammunition for returning the water utilities to public ownership.
Whitehall doesn’t rule OK: How a canal trust tragically missed out on a £1 million payout from river polluters
A canal trust working to restore an arm of the Grand Union Canal narrowly missed out on a a £1m payment from a new scheme to fund river trusts from big polluters like Thames Water. Instead the Treasury snaffled the money.
Is George Osborne’s Northern Powerhouse about to hit the buffers?
George Osborne’s ambitious rail electrification plans for the North could be about to be wrecked by a failure by Network Rail to cost the plans properly – and a bungled political problem over the safety clearance required for the live wires.
Why millions of passengers will face years of overcrowded trains because of a staggering electrification blunder
A huge cost overrun and delay on the Great Western main line electrification scheme will mean passengers across the country will also suffer from outdated overcrowded trains because it will hit replacement trains across the country
Exposed: The Whitehall high flyer who stole ministry secrets to help Adam Smith International bid for overseas aid contracts
How a British private contractor – with right wing links – used the unethical behaviour of a civil servant to give them an unfair commercial advantage to bid for taxpayer’s cash for overseas aid.
Independent Police Complaints Commission largely drops investigation into Met Police handling of Operation Midland
The IPCC has largely dropped its investigation into the Met Police’s handling of Operation Midland which centred round allegations from a complainant ” Nick ” alleging an historic paedophile ring involving prominent people, MPs and former government ministers.
A British made overseas aid scandal that has ended in ruined reputations for the people who promoted it
Adam Smith International, a major British company that bids for hundreds of millions of British taxpayers cash for overseas aid projects. has come a cropper for improper behaviour. But is this only part of the story and what are its links to the neoliberal right.
Britain: A nation of paedophile voyeurs
The controversial remarks of police chief Simon Bailey that we should not prosecute people viewing child sexual abuse images on line because they are so many of them – suggests there is something very sick in British society if that is the case.
Has Theresa May got it wrong over the Brexit negotiation plan?
Theresa May may have a cunning plan to try and reconcile border controls and free access for industries to the EU but according to Labour peer and former Gordon Brown special adviser Stewart Wood, she is making a colossal mistake by reading across a special deal for justice to the whole of Brexit
By-election horrors:Labour’s dilemma and the faux fear of UKIP
Labour has had a nasty wake up call from the Copeland by-election. But they have seen off UKIP and should now refocus on tackling the Tories and Liberal Democrats head on – and have some radical thinking and galvanise their Young Turks to fight May’s council elections.
Rerun Dave Prentis election urge candidates at Unison malpractice hearing
The final day of the hearing into electoral malpractice at Unison over the last election of its general secretary, Dave Prentis, heard submissions from rival candidates saying its should be rerun. The judge’s decision will be in a month’s time.
Home Office rewrites definition of child sexual exploitation
The Home Office this week quietly rewrite the definition of child sexual exploitation so that people could finally agree exactly what it is.
Will David Cameron’s National Citizen Service deliver results for poor disaffected ” hard to reach ” youth?
Theresa May has tweaked David Cameron’s ambitious programme for National Citizen Service as the National Audit Office questions its value for money. Can it be a success for “hard to reach”teenagers or will it be taken over by sons and daughters of ambitious middle class parents? The jury is out.
Exclusive: How the equality watchdog sacked a disabled army veteran and IRA bomb survivor by email
Today the Equality and Human Rights Commission – the body that is supposed to defend women,disabled and ethnic minorities – sacked ten staff by email. Six \are disabled. They have until tomorrow to clear their desks. Donald Trump would approve.
Hidden:The secret influencers bankrolling centre right think tanks to change your mind
An important report out today from Transparify reveals how many of Britain’s centre right think tanks are not disclosing who is funding them. Given many influence government and the public – this is not good news for transparency or democratic debate.
Standards at the tax office: A damning indictment from professional people who should know
Chartered accountants have given a damning assessment of how bad they see Inland Revenue’s services – contrary to the claims by the government.
Exclusive: Southern Railway contract to be investigated by National Audit Office
The strike hit and badly managed Southern Railway =- which has caused misery for millions of commuters coming into London – is to be investigated by Parliament’s financial watchdog, the National Audit Office.
How Romania’s inhumane prison system led to the tragic death of a campaigning newspaper owner
Tragically the co-owner of Romania’s oldest newspaper, Romania Libera, has died after suffering illnesses brought on by the country’s appalling prison system. His son who said he had been jailed on trumped up charges is facing extradition to Romania from the UK in April and is fighting the case.
Coming soon: Chaos for your tax bill
A huge re-organisation of HMRC tax offices -involving closing 170 local offices and replacing them with 13 regional offices – and relocating 38,000 staff – spells chaos for future tax collection as a National Audit Office report warns
A Romanian scandal that threatens press freedom that the UK could stop in its tracks
A German businessman is facing extradition to Romania using the European Arrest warrant. But the real reasons for his extradition is to try and close down Romania’s oldest newspaper, Romana Libera, to stop it exposing corruption in this EU country.
Brian Altman: The scuba diving prosecutor who “speared” Milly Dowler’s killer
A forensic lawyer and former Treasury Counsel who prosecuted Milly Dowler’s killer has been appointed the new lead counsel to the Independent Inquiry into Child sexual Abuse.
Paedophile loses case to ban Facebook from publishing his criminal past
The Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland Sir Declan Morgan has ruled that a paedophile cannot ban Facebook from publishing details of his criminal past or his picture on the net- though a blog which named his address and led to harassment should have been taken down earlier.
Only Five Hours Left to Expose the Shocking Leveson Evidence Press and Police Don’t Want You to Hear
The British governments consultation on whether Leveson Two should go ahead ends at 5pm today. Don’t let there be another coverup
The 60 year old shame of Home Office treatment of sexually and physically abused child migrants
Next month the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse will hear about Britain’s shameful record on sending British children to Australian, Canadian and then Southern Rhodesian children’s homes knowing that in the case of Australia, they would be physically and sexually abused.
Police arrest man on suspicion of stalking a child sexual abuse survivor
Met police say they have arrested a man on suspicion of stalking after they searched his house in Kendal, Cumbria, using a warrant under the harassment act.
Unison: Former senior official says ” anti democratic practices” used to elect Dave Prentis in three previous contests
A former senior Unison official, Mike Jackson, who supported Heather Wakefield, against Dave Prentis at the last general secretary election, has submitted a statement to the tribunal – which has gone unchallenged by Unison- saying that ” anti democratic practices” were used previously to elect Dave
2017: Year of the Death Star?
2016 was pretty bad. Will 2017 will be worse. It could be – but let’s hope not.
Unison:A libel threat, a database and a ” cut and paste” email – all to help Dave Prentis win?
Cliff Williams, the head of Team Dave, the campaign group to elect Dave Prentis as general secretary, and a leading union official was cross questioned by lawyers today on the misuse of officials to help Dave Prentis win. The hearing will continue after the New Year.
Unison election: Now Electoral Reform Services on trial
The second day of the hearing into complaints about union officials breaking rules to ensure that Dave Prentis was re-elected general secretary of Unison, put the spotlight on the role of the Electoral Reform Services which was both oversaw and scrutinised the election.
Unison:Union Democracy on Trial
A hearing begins on Monday into whether officials in Britain’s biggest public sector trade union, Unison broke its own rules and an Act of Parliament by overzealously supporting the re-election of its general secretary, Dave Prentis. All candidates who stood against him have lodged complaints.
Revealed: Boris’s Imperialist dream: £3 billion for military adventures ” East of Suez”
The big political row over what Boris Johnson said about the Saudis engaging in ” proxy wars” is a distraction to what Boris is really telling the Middle East as this text of his speech shows. It all about the revival of a new form of British Imperialism promising more action in the Gulf.
Why Labour needs a simple message
With the exception of one good council by-election result yesterday Labour’s performance was dire. They need a simple message to galvanise the voters to see where they stand.
Exclusive: Disabled army veteran and IRA bomb survivor targeted for the sack by human rights watchdog
The Equality and Human rights Commission are slashing jobs as a result of government cuts with black and disabled people taking the brunt of potential compulsory redundancies. This is an example of one of the people facing the chop.
The loss of Zac Goldsmith and the Lib Dem revival
I have mixed feelings about Zac Goldsmith’s failure to be re-elected. I disagree with him over Brexit and his Mayoral campaign but he is a true democrat and environmentalist. There are also lessons for Labour in the Lib Dem revival.
The day I shook the hand of Fidel Castro
The death of Fifel Castro today has reminded me of my visit to Cuba in 1978 to attend the World Youth Festival and how it became not only a showcase for Cuba but allowed the rising student elite of Britain to hone their skills for future roles.
Bumped by Trump: How Whitehall used the US elections as cover for £1 billion military spending blunders
Nearly £1 billion of blunders by the Ministry of Defence and the Treasury were made public on the day of the US election when press attention was elsewhere – ensuring little or no coverage.
These included money to war injured soldiers and control over defence orders.
Henriques: Help or Hindrance
Sir Richard Henriques report into the failure of high profile police inquiries into public figures accused of historic child sexual abuse proposes a radical rebalance in future investigations – aimed at protecting suspects as much as those who accuse them. They go too far.
Why prosecuting “Nick” for perverting the course of justice may not stand up in court
Northumbria Police are to investigate whether ” Nick ” the main complainant and survivor in Operation Midland investigation by the Met Police should be prosecuted for perverting the course of justice. I think this going to be highly unlikely in view of another failed prosecution.
The arrogance of judge Dame Lowell Goddard
Yvette Cooper , the new chair of the Commons Home affairs Committee, is quite right to rebuke judge Dame Lowell Goddard for refusing to appear before Parliament ot explain her resignation as chair of the independent child sexual abuse inquiry. It is both a disgrace and arrogant
Will the national body that prides itself on conciliation end up in a bitter dispute with itself?
Acas, the uncontroversial body that tries to mediate and reconcile disputes between workers and employers is about to become embroiled in its own dispute between staff and bosses.
The Brexit court case: Much ado about nothing
The slanted right wing media coverage of the court decision has a fueled a popularism not supported by the facts. The very people who voted to leave should be pleased. It is reasserting our sovereignty.
The not quite complete Exaro archive
Exaro’s website has been taken down and removed from the net. But a large part of the articles written by staff have been saved and can be viewed through this link. But the link is not as comprehensive as it should be as some articles have mysteriously disappeared.
The Keith Vaz Westminster fan club: Why do they protect this man
Conservative MPs including a large swathe of Cabinet ministers decided last night that Keith Vaz, the former Labour chairman of the home affairs committee, should be appointed to the justice committee. This is while a recent scandal involving male prostitutes has still to be sorted. Why?
Are German State Railways exploiting train drivers in Britain to put lives at risk?
Exhausted freight train drivers have fallen asleep at the wheel passing danger signals because DB Cargo UK, a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn, provided poor rest facilities and long shifts, a rail accident report found. Time to renationalise freight as well as passenger trains in the UK>
The crisis at the heart of Britain’s Equality and Human Rights Commission
With Human rights issues being at the top of modern society’s agenda, how is it that the body monitoring them is now in crisis with staff and management at loggerheads over the way its is run under present government cuts.
Operation Pallial: Bringing too long awaited justice for some child sexual abuse survivors after nearly 30 years
So Gordon Anglesea, the former police inspector, has finally been convicted of indecent assault against teenagers – some 30 years after the event. Too long a wait for justice for child sexual abuse survivors
Job Half Done: Alexis Jay’s statement on the future of the Child Sexual Abuse inquiry
The statement by Alexis Jay, the chair of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, should be welcomed as an important step in the right direction.
Why the children of Greville Janner believe he must be innocent of 33 child sex abuse allegations
Earlier on Byline I wrote a blog saying Daniel Janner was wrong to say there was no case against his father for child sex abuse. He contacted me to put his side of the case and I thought it only fair to publish his views why he thinks that is the case and why he wants a civil trial
The Fake Sheikh – a Key Link in Daniel Morgan Murder Cover-Up
Mazher Mahmood’s extensive dealings with Southern Investigations require News UK and the Metropolitan police to explain their knowledge and protection of the murder suspects
Will the BBC get all its cash from its new freedom to raise millions from video on iPlayer?
The cash strapped BBC is in crisis. But is it doing everything it should to raise money from new sources like iPlayer. Not really says the National Audit Office.
Robert Halfon v Jeremy Corbyn: The battle for the working class vote
A new battle of ideas to woo working and middle class voters to the Tories began at an unlikely Tory fringe group meeting supporting trade unions. It was overshadowed by a misty eyed view of Brexit.
Fake Sheikh in Sham Home Office Agent Claims
Austerity Britain: How Unison has helped create Durham’s new poor
Teaching assistants in Durham facing a 23 per cent pay cut ( or 10 per cent if they work more hours) imposed by a Labour council and their union, Unison, who supported Corbyn to be leader, are doing little to help them
Join Byline Insider to crowdfund me and participate in key debate on child sex abuse
A new venture by me with Peter Jukes on Byline Insider after Exaro folded is launched today. Your support will be appreciated so I can continue my investigative journalism
Labour’s best council by election result night since the General Election
Labour last night gained three seats out of nine council by-elections last night. The Liberal Democrats gained two, Plaid gained one. Disastrous night for the Tories who lost four of the six seats they were defending . Before: Con 6,Lab 1, SNP1, and Ind 1. After: Con 2, Labour 4, Lib Dem 2, Plaid 1.
Call General Election now: What Ed would tell Theresa
Will Gordon Brown’s failure to call a general election directly he became PM rebound the same way on Theresa May if she fails to call an election. Ed Balls thinks she should.
Restoring Trust in Journalism
Abuse of Trust: A horrible reminder of a child sex scandal as the Jay inquiry prepares to examine Greville Janner
As the Jay inquiry gears up to re-open Leicestershire’s child sex abuse scandal of 1970s and 1980s by examining allegayions against former Leicester MP Greville Janner, a timely book on the scandal is republished.
An 11 plus failure speaks out:Theresa May wants conformity over opportunity
Why Theresa May’s initiative to revive grammar schools will spell disaster for late developers,decrease opportunity, encourage a more conformist society and bolster the existing Establishment.
Daniel Janner is wrong to say all allegations of child sex abuse against his father must be fabricated
Daniel Janner’s plans to seek a judicial review against the Independent Inquiry into Child Sex Abuse investigating allegations against his father, Greville, sexually abusing survivors is over the top.
Why we need disability campaigners like Lord Rix now
The death of learning disability campaigner Lord Rix reminds us both how much things have changed for the disabled but that we need a fresh campaign to fight current challenges.
How government cuts led to blunders in complex criminal compensation awards
Staff cuts and turnover at the Criminal Injuries Compensation authority which handles claims from terrorist victims at home and abroad and violent injuries caused by criminals has led to a series of blunders and miscalculations in paying out complex awards to people.
Alexis Jay: A game changer appointment for the Child Sex Abuse Inquiry?
The decision to go ahead without delay to appoint Alexis Jay in place of Dame Lowell Goddard who resigned last week to the chair of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse could amount to a game changer for the troubled investigation. It should be welcomed.
A very legal coup:How Theresa May’s triumph meant Lowell Goddard’s demise
The sudden departure of Dame Lowell Goddard as chair of the independent child sex abuse inquiry was more than just a resignation. events surrounding it have all the hallmarks of a legal coup.
Corbyn’s Progress: How council by elections are now panning out
Council by elections are still showing Labour doing well. But are the party just piling up votes in their strongholds or can they break through like the Liberal Democrats and start gaining Tory seats?
Time for Dame Lowell Goddard to explain why she quit
Dame Lowell Goddard owes the public and survivors a full and frank explanation why she suddenly announced her decision to quit the child sex abuse inquiry
My views on Exaro,the Middle East and Jeremy Corbyn before MPs resigned en masse from his Shadow Cabinet
An interview with Arab News Network earlier this year where I explain my views on Exaro, the Middle East and Jeremy Corbyn before the revolt of 180 Labour Mps against his leadership.
On the way: Multi million pound fines for Brexiteer Andrea Leadsom
Andrea Leadsom, the failed challenger to Theresa May, has been dumped in the slurry by being put in charge of replacing £2.3 billion of farm subsidies while facing years of fines from the European Commission for the UK#s failure to pay farmers properly.
Liberal Democrats: On the rise again in the shires?
After over a year in the doldrums following their general election defeat are the Liberal democrats finally on the rise again in the shires?
Exaro: What next?
Exaro may have closed this week but the two people who ran the site, David Hencke and Mark Conrad are now looking for a new future for the investigative team.
A disturbing child sex abuse case that raises awkward questions about insurers
A disturbing case of insurers trying to block a complaint of child sex abuse in the Church of England highlights the role of insurers in holding back investigations and should be tackled by the Goddard inquiry.
How the NHS wasted £16m of your money on a botched privatisation that collapsed within months
The NHS have just wasted £16m of your money on a failed privatisation project to help the elderly and mentally ill which could be repeated across the country because of failings of financial expertise and oversight in the health service
Labour’s UKIP fear factor: A ballot box illusion
Labour MPs want to ditch Jeremy Corbyn because they fear a meltdown at the next general election with UKIP taking swathes of their seats. But the first clutch of council elections suggest it is UKIP in meltdown and Labour is doing rather well.
The mystery of the secret discovery of chemical WMD in Iraq which poses more questions than answers
An extraordinary article on Exaro by my colleague and co-author Nick Kochan raises the question whether the purchase of chemical weapons from Iraqi war lords by the CIA was used to fund terrorist attacks on British and American troops in the aftermath of the Iraq War.
Chilcot and The Blair Rich Project
As Blair faces judgement over the Iraq War from Sir John Chilcot on Wednesday, a TV programme will look back at all the wealth he has amassed since leaving office in 2007.
I am interviewed as it is derived from our book, Blair Inc, which I co-authored with Francis Beckett and Nick Kochan.
Why treacherous Michael Gove can’t be trusted with your money at Number Ten
Michael Gove is already seen as a treacherous figure in the Conservative Party by stabbing Boris Johnson in the front. But did we know about his appalling record on keeping control of public finances which has wrecked the presentation of government accounts this year.
Stop these nasty attacks on people living here now
The rise of racist attacks on people from European Union and ethnic minorities must stop now. They have been legitimised by the Brexit campaigners like Nigel Farage, Boris Johnson and Michael Gove giving a gloss of respectability to louts.
The woes of the first 48 hours of Brexit
We now have Independence Day but the woes hitting this country are only just beginning and look certain to grow. It is going to be more than a bumpy ride.
Why I am going for Remain on Thursday
My gut feeling on why I am voting Remain on Thursday
Is social media fuelling hatred and contempt in Britain?
Is the murder of Jo Cox’ causing us to pause and ask whether social media is fuelling hatred and contempt? Are people turning political debate into nasty insults? Are women and child sex abuse survivors the growing target of trolls in an increasingly nasty society? It’s time to stop this.
How Gove is dumping one of Britain’s worst courts on Labour’s Greater Manchester
Michael Gove, the justice secretary, intend to dump one of the worst performing courts in England and Wales on the expected to be Labour controlled Greater Manchester as an experiment in devolution. It comes when the courts system is chaotic and he plans further cuts.
Where’s St Helena? It’s off Jersey isn’t it?
A big scandal revealed Britain had spent £285m building a new airport in St Helena that no jet can land because it is too windy. The trouble is most people don’t know where it is anyway.
Why all the UK should see this brilliant exhibition on the Calais Jungle
The Migration Museum Project – which is campaigning for a British museum to celebrate the diversity of migration- has put on an amazing exhibition on life at the Calais Jungle that is both uplifting and harrowing at the same time. Go see it if you can.
Are expensive libel cases on the way out?
New figures released two days ago reveal an enormous drop in new libel claims last year – are we seeing the end of expensive libel cases and the beginning of people using the ” right to be forgotten ” on Google to silence critics
Untold: The Daniel Morgan Murder on General Release
Thanks to Byline supporters the Ten Part Podcast is underway – but we need your help to overcome the media’s disinterest and/or collusion
Racist and Cruel: The nasty world of the Equality and Human Rights Commission
The Equality and Human Rights Commission is about to sack 30 mainly ethnic minoriy and disabled low paid staff in a move similar to the worst practice of employers it criticises.
1000 miles of Russian Reflections:Why the Russians don’t think Putin is an ogre
A 13 day voyage from St Petersburg to Moscow along rivers, lakes and canals gives some insight into what Russians may be thinking under Putin
Russian Reflections:How you can’t spend a rouble in a Russian loo
The extraordinary paucity of the public loo in Russia and the near impossibility of finding a disabled one on a trip with my wife Margaret this month. Why Russia needs to get its act together on this.
A tainted and improper appointment by Nicky Morgan
Nicky Morgan’s decision to appoint millionaire lawyer David Issac as the new chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission is the first appointment which does not comply fully with the Nolan principles of selflessness and integrity and will taint the work of the Commission.
” Darth Vader” mandarin’s unstellar performance on crime mustn’t pay
A leading civil servant nicknamed Darth Vader bungles his appearance before Parliament’s financial watchdog, the Public Accounts Committee,explaining why the government has failed to confiscate the assets of criminals.
How the government is allowing the Japanese to profit from captive London and Brummie commuters
The government is throwing a lifeline to a privatised Japanese railway company to bid for lucrative London and Birmingham commuter services as the firm faces a terminal decline in traffic using Tokyo’s commuter trains.
Seven Guys in a Boat: The Caen Hill challenge
Seven friends still just in their prime – average age 69 – take on Britain’s biggest canal flight in a narrowboat as part of a relaxing spring break. Who says we are past it.
Murdoch’s papers attacking Phone Hacking Victims to Divert from Detective Hacked to Death?
Facing an onslaught from many sections of the press for breaking the Whittingdale scandal, Byline is also an acute focus of interest for Rupert Murdoch’s UK press.
Byline: Breaking Stories the Media Avoid
Why John Whittingdale Must Recuse Himself from Press Legislation
Call it conflict of interest or regulatory capture, the Culture Secretary must resign from any say on legislation on the press which has extensive materials about his private life
Europe Turns Violent Against Refugees
Should £1 bn of unclaimed pensions, shares and insurance policies be used to alleviate austerity?
A new quango entirely composed of wealthy business people will be used to find £1 billion of dormant assets so ministers can distribute other people’s money to allievate the cuts they are imposing on people in Britain
Top lawyer faces storm over ” perceived conflict of interest” in government job
A plan to appoint a £500,000 a year lawyer to chair the Equality and Human rights Commission has provoked a Parliamentary row over whether he will have a ” perceived conflict of interest ” in taking the £50,000 a year job because his firm has large numbers of government contracts.
Is Lowell Goddard moving towards a ” show Trial ” over the Westminster Paedophile Ring?
Lady Justice Goddard’s statement on April 1 that the inquiry would test the credibility of survivors in its major hearings and condemn those who made false allegations points to any inquiry into the Westminster Paedophile ring becoming a show trial.
Facebook to challenge paedophile’s right to privacy and excessive damages in Northern Ireland test case
A case which led to a paedophile winning £20,000 damages for harassment and the banning of Facebook page by a campaigner is to be challenged in the Northern Ireland courts next week by Facebook.
Child Sex Abuse Justice: Premier League or Eton Mess?
Two widely differing sentences for child sexual abuse – one for a Premier League footballer and another for an Old Etonian – highlight the divide in current British society.
Heritage railways: Nearly a very nasty train crash
A ” near miss ” train crash involving a rail enthusiast’s steam train trip with a main line express has highlighted safety concerns about the private companies that run these trips.
The Sun Vault: the Death Star of British Journalism
At the heart of the country’s best selling newspaper is a legendary 7 foot high safe full of ‘eye-popping’ material on public figures that won’t be published, suggesting a form of blackmail is at the heart of the British press
Helping crime pay with Theresa May
Far from ensuring that criminals can’t get away with living a life of luxury on their illegal swag, Theresa May is presiding over record levels of stolen cash and goods never being recovered because of cuts hitting the people trying to confiscate the money.
Goddard Inquiry: A very judicial view of child sex abuse
Will the judicial atmosphere of Lady Justice Goddard’s inquiry into child sexual abuse be a serious handicap to survivors giving evidence and lay them open to a charge of making false allegations?
Google bows to EU law and removes right to search for delisted posts
From Monday Google has decided to end the right of people being able to search for delisted posts by searching Google.com from Europe. A victory for privacy but also helping people to erase their past.
A worrying indictment of how child sex abuse cases are handled today
A report by a panel of child abuse survivors raises serious and worrying questions of how cases are being handled just as the official inquiry by Lady Justice Goddard is due to begin preliminary hearings.
The News of the World and the Daniel Morgan Murder: the key reason for Leveson Two
New information reveals how Rupert Murdoch’s best selling Sunday tabloid was inextricably linked for three decades with Britain’s most investigated murder
How EU law hobbled Parliament investigating worst mis-selling scandal in history
EU laws have prevented Parliament’s own watchdog, the National Audit Office, from properly investigating one of the biggest financial scandals in history – the mis-selling of Payment Protection Insurance to millions of people.
Holding Tony Hall, BBC director general to account over Savile
Now we have had Dame Janet Smith’s horrific findings about Savile at the BBC Tony Hall, its director general, must be held to account for implementing all her recommendations.
Update on the Daniel Morgan Murder Podcast
A new opening episode available to subscribers, a new sponsor and distributor, and support from the Shadow Culture Minister.
How the Legal Ombudsman’s Office ripped off the taxpayer with a £1m irregular incentive scheme
The Legal Ombudsman – the public body that handles thousands of complaints against solicitors and barristers- has itself been awarding its staff irregular and contentious incentive payments without getting legal approval from the Ministry of Justice.
Westminster Paedophile Inquiry Row: A shrewd move by Scotland Yard
Met Police Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan Howe’s decision to appoint a retired High Court judge to review procedures used during the Westminster Paedophile Ring investigation is a shrewd move that will benefit the Met,the public and calm the clamour.
A bloody nose for Keith Vaz: Met Police cleared in “Jane” rape case
An independent review has cleared the Met Police of mishandling an historic rape case involving Leon Brittan contradicting criticisms from the Commons Home Affairs Committee chaired by Keith Vaz.
Why are we waiting for Lady Macur’s Review into child sex abuse in North Wales?
The government is sitting on a major review into failed child sex abuse investigations in North Wales and the judge who wrote it has recommended redactions. Why?
How Kenneth Clarke and Chris Grayling’s failed commercial venture cost us the taxpayer over £1m
The National Audit Office reveals today that a Whitehall commercial venture by Chris Grayling selling prison expertise to regimes with dubious judicial systems has actually cost the taxpayer over £1m
Theresa May’s new immigration official: the private landlord
From February 1 every private landlord and home owner who takes in lodgers becomes an immigration officer in a Home Office scheme doomed to be ineffective and possibly racist.
Leaked Savile Report: The BBC culture that failed to protect people from abuse
The BBC’s spin management that the leaked Savile report by Dame Janet Smith is all in the past is wrong. It is still very much an unresolved issue at the BBC
Exaro Exclusive: Dame Janet Smith’s criticism of the BBC over Savile
The leaked draft report by Dame Janet Smith on Jimmy Savile at the BBC.
Last Day to be part of Daniel Morgan Murder Podcast Team
As funding closes and the 10 part podcast serial is set for general release in Spring, some news about the production
Sneaky and Naive: The Department of Health’s plan to raise care home inspection fees
The Department of Health is planning to recoup £780m by charging the full whack for inspecting private care homes, ambulance services and hospitals. Superficially it sounds a good idea but their logic is naive and they have been sneaky in announcing the change.
Fact and Fiction over Jeremy Corbyn’s first by election defeat of the year
A Labour Party defeat in the first council by-election of the year in flooded Carlisle is not all it appears to be as reported by Guido Fawkes and the Daily Express. it is another example of sloppy journalism.
Is a £1 million fine a drop in the ocean for Thames Water?
The £1m fine for sewage pollution of the Grand Union Canal is the largest ever in Britain. But Thames Water is so wealthy that it will hardly hurt them.
Armchair Audit: Sir Philip Dilley, the dilatory flood maestro
The chair of the environment agency is in trouble for not turning up to handle the flood crisis. I am not surprised
A rare accolade for ” Lawrence of Arabia”
The Culture ministry has quietly given Lawrence of Arabia’s tiny home -left untouched since 1935- a rare historic building listing. This comes 80 years after his death and just before the centenary of the Arab Revolt he jointly led in World War I to topple the Ottoman Turks.
Revealed:The ten job Tory who couldn’t live on £110,000 a year
A Tory minister who quit his job as Foreign minister for Africa last year because he couldn’t live on £110,000 a year now has ten year jobs – many dealing with Africa- after standing down as an MP in May.
UPDATE on Daniel Morgan Murder Podcast Serial
The first episode is set for release to sponsors before Christmas. We returned to the Murder Scene. And more episodes announced.
Child sex abuse survivors: a dangerous precedent to withdraw funding
A national media campaign against a charity which helps child sex abuse survivors has set a bad precedent which could stifle help for people across the country.
Untrustworthy Truss: The dishonest cover up that left farmers owed hundreds of millions of pounds
Last week Elizabeth Truss bungled payments worth more than £1 billion to farmers because of a monumental failure of a new computer system to pay them. And the Metropolitan media let her get away with it. Farmers now face delays in getting their money and the EU will be able to fine the UK.
Oldham West: How Labour is defeating the UKIP challenge
The Oldham West result has not only confounded critics in the media and Westminster but has destroyed UKIP’s strategy to replace Labour in the North.
The “Jane” date rape case: A flawed report from MPs on the Home Affairs Committee
The Home Affairs Committee report on the investigation into the ” Jane” date rape allegation against Leon Brittan is flawed – more influenced by a media feeding frenzy than sound judgement.
Spending Review: Caveat Emptor
George Osborne’s spending review appears too good to be true- and it is. It was a brilliant Smoke and Mirrors exercise . Buyer beware
Background to Daniel Morgan Murder Podcast: Recent Revelations
If you’ve discovered this Podcast project and want to know more about the background, I’ve been covering this story for a few years now, and there are plenty of links on Byline
Jimmy Savile: How the BBC have by passed Dame Janet Smith’s child sexual abuse review
The BBC have effectively by passed its own inquiry into the culture inside the Corporation that allowed paedophile Jimmy Savile to practice unhindered by publishing a report exonerating its child protection and whistleblowing policies.before the chair,Dame Janet Smith, can report.
How Leon Brittan lost his job as home secretary – Charles Moore’s fascinating account 30 years on
The row over whether Leon Brittan was a child sex abuser was as polarised 30 years ago as it is today. Fascinating extracts from Thatcher’s papers revealed in Charles Moore’s authorised biography of the Tory leader reveal all.
Getting Away with Murder: How the Fifth Morgan Murder Inquiry was Subverted and Ongoing Intimidation
Over the course of three decades, Daniel Morgan is the most investigated murder in British history. Now Byline can reveal how News of the World tried to derail the final fifth investigation, and how intimidation of the murder inquiry team continues to this day
How a Whitehall mandarin wanted to add insult to injury for redundant steel apprentices
A Whitehall mandarin thought it worth saving £1.7m by refusing to pay any money to redundant steel apprentices until his political boss, Sajid Javid, overruled him.
CPS drop Charges against Daniel Morgan Murder Detective
Brief comment on the news the CPS will not be prosecuting former DCS Dave Cook after an IPCC investigation into Misconduct in Public Office
Miskiw Confirms: News of the World subverted Murder Inquiry on behalf of Murder Suspects
Greg Miskiw’s confirmation that another NOTW executive was subverting a high profile murder inquiry on behalf of the prime suspects demands a full investigation by the Metropolitan Police
Is Corbyn’s Labour already cutting the mustard with local voters?
Labour is starting to get some spectacular swings in council by elections – though you wouldn’t know it from the national media. The Tories are still resilient.
Stormin’ Corbyn a hit in Korea (No Mail-on-Line not North Korea but the capitalist South)
Jer,my Corbyn may be panned by the conventional mainstream media in Britain. But in South Korea it is a different matter.
The Restoration of Rebekah: How Rupert Murdoch Hacked the UK
Draft Speech for the Investigative Journalism Conference hosted by HBO and Gazeta Wyborga, Warsaw, 3 November 2015
Closed today: The rehab hospital that should be at the cutting edge of NHS care
The government boast about improving the NHS while at the grass roots cutting edge rehabilitation units are closed to save money.
Why let your good smear campaign be spoiled with the facts, David Aaronovitch
David Aaronovitch says the whole Elm Guest House paedophile scandal is a fantasy and a smear on important innocent people. I beg to differ.
Like a banana republic, but without the bananas
Dropped: The vile Saudi Arabian contract that helped prop up a barbaric justice system
Government scraps £5.9m contract bid to aid vile Saudi Arabian justice system
UPDATED: How Alan Rusbridger became a surveillance target after the Phone Hacking Scandal
As former private detective Jonathan Rees claims core participant status at the Undercover Police Inquiry, secret tapes reveal how the Guardian editor was targeted by double cross and the dark arts.
Justice for the Orgreave miners 30 years on: But from Theresa May?
Theresa May, the home secretary, is considering whether to launch an inquiry into the police handling of the miners’ strike of 1984 – particularly over the battle of Orgreave.
The Panorama child sex abuse fall out: No one yet knows the truth
The Panorama investigation into the VIP Westminster paedophile ring promised to reveal the truth. But it ended up taking us little further because at this stage nobody knows the full extent of the allegations and whether they are true.
So afraid of the Saudis: How the Brits daren’t cancel a contract to bolster barbaric justice
The government is refusing to cancel a £5.9 m contract with Saudi Arabia to bolster a prison and judicial system that regularly publicly beheads dissidents -just at a time when a teenager faces a beheading and crucifixion.
Right On: A warning to the national press over Operation Midland – the murder and child sex abuse investigation
The national press have rightly now received a serious warning not to identify the key witness in the Met Police’s Operation Midland investigation into historic child sex abuse murders after a series of frankly irresponsible articles
Child Sex Abuse: The Met Police’s honest attempt to safeguard survivors and alleged abusers
The Met Police’s statement on the future of Operation Midland – the murder investigation into the Westminster paedophile ring – was much broader and more thoughtful than the knee jerk coverage in the media.
How the golden oldies and the disenchanted young combined to give Stormin’ Corbyn victory
Explaining Jeremy Corbyn’s victory in generational terms.
An appeal to Andy Burnham and Michael Dugher: Tom Watson’s Speech about the Daniel Morgan Murder
With new shadow ministers appointed for both the Home Office and DCMS, it’s worth looking back at an important speech by the recently appointed Labour deputy leader, Tom Watson, which outlines the ‘criminal media nexus’ around News of the World.
Byline Podcast Episode 4: Corbyn, Democracy and The Future of Polling with YouGov President Peter Kellner
Explaining Wapping, the Criminal Media Nexus, and the Reappointment of Rebekah Brooks
At a GMB Injustice Conference last Saturday, I followed Alastair Morgan’s painful explanation of his brother’s murder and cover-up with my personal view about why this injustice has lasted so long.
One Remove from Murder: Morgan, Marunchak and Murdoch
On the eve of Rebekah Brooks’ return as CEO of News UK, the axe murder of Daniel Morgan is a continuing problem for her company. New evidence undermines two crucial denials.
Byline Podcast Episode Three: Capitalism and Patriarchy with Julie Bindel and Simon Copland
Norman Finkelstein hits $100,000 crowdfunding target with Byline!
Byline Podcast Episode Two with Evan Davis
Phone Hacking? You ain’t seen Nothing Yet: Daniel Morgan Murder 2000-2006
Following the chronology of the Daniel Morgan murder – the most investigated murder in British history – we have now arrived at the phone hacking era. But a timeline reveals Glenn Mulcaire’s work to be the relatively benign tip of a much darker iceberg
Why Labour’s patronising grandees have driven people to vote for Stormin’ Corbyn
Clumsy interventions from senior Labour figures into the leadership campaign have only increased Jeremy Corbyn’s outsider appeal.
Noam Chomsky endorses Norman Finkelstein's project for Byline
Byline Podcast Episode One: Westminster scandals and scoops with David Hencke
Revealed: The Treasury mandarin who said losing £1bn for the taxpayer was “value for money”
Why did a senior treasury civil servant wholeheartedly endorse losing the British taxpayer so much money?
Labour leadership: Stormin’ Corbyn winning the new battle of Berkhamsted
Jeremy Corbyn’s popularity with Labour voters is widespread and genuine, not just confined to a militant tendency.
UPDATEDX2: Four months on: Osborne/Murdoch BBC Stitch Up
While foreign newspaper barons may want to squash the BBC, it won’t help them with their failing business models and collapsing paywalls.
How Much Did Rebekah Brooks know about the Daniel Morgan Murder
Rebekah Brooks worked at News of the World for all but two years from 1989 to 2003. How much did she know know Southern Investigations and police inquiries into their role in the murder of Daniel Morgan?
Discovered in the Archives: the News of the World’s One Piece on the Daniel Morgan Murder
After the Summer of 87 and two violent deaths in the circle of police and private investigators in South London, how did the News of the World cover the aftermath? Digging deeper in the archives reveals an astonishing interview
#Scandal: Why the Telegraph’s ‘Peak Avocado’ Clickbait Represents Everything Wrong with Modern Journalism
A Tale of the Fake Sheikh and Two Attorney Generals: Limited Police Inquiries and Damage Limitation
A repost from December last year when the BBC were told charging decisions against Mazher Mahmood were “weeks away” – SEVEN MONTHS ago
Norman Finkelstein: Amnesty's Gaza Reports Are 'Just Israeli Propaganda'
Summer of 87: Two Violent Deaths, Two Rising Murdoch Stars
The 30 year cover-up of the Daniel Morgan murder is often portrayed as a murky morass. But revisiting the news coverage of the time, the outlines of the alleged conspiracy are clearer than you would imagine.
Head of Police Watchdog Under Investigation – More Links Between Stephen Lawrence and Daniel Morgan Murder
News that the first head of the Independent Police Complaints Commission is under investigation for providing ‘misleading information’ during the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry is of great concern to the family of Daniel Morgan
How the Guardian was Got At but the News of the World Got Away With It
15 years ago the Met’s Operation Two Bridges exposed a lucrative illegal trade between corrupt police officers, private investigators and Fleet Street. Nothing was done. But what happened to two Guardian journalists who were writing about police corruption at the same time?
Julian Assange: The Byline Interviews, Part Two – 'It’s Almost All Censorship'
Exploding the Myth of the Cook/Hames ‘Affair’
Overlooked evidence proves that the justification for News of the World’s surveillance of the senior investigating officer in the Daniel Morgan murder inquiry is an abject excuse
7 Suppressed Investigations into News of the World in 7 Years – Why Leveson II is Needed
A Bellingcat and Byline investigation for the first time can reveal Scotland Yard had intelligence Mazher Mahmood was corrupting police officers as far back as the summer of 2000
Breaking Bad BBC – Taking the Corporatism out of the Corporation
Writers and producers of BBC television drama are being stifled by the corporation’s top-down commissioning system. But public service broadcasting could easily be more pluralistic….
'The Right To Be Different': Byline Interviews Peter Tatchell
Did Mazher Mahmood Mislead Leveson about the Dark Arts of His Past?
A repost of an article from last November when, the BBC was told, any coverage of the Fake Sheikh would be ‘prejudicial’ to CPS charging decisions which were “weeks away.” That was SEVEN MONTHS AGO.
Why is Rupert Murdoch Stepping Down as Head of 21st Century Fox?
After four years of a phenomenal corporate fightback after the phone hacking scandal erupted in 2011, is Rupert Murdoch’s resignation from the entertainment giant just a natural succession? Or is there some revelation pending in the wings?
Julian Assange: The Byline Interviews, Part One – ‘The God of Mass Surveillance’
More on the Mirror Group, the Dark Arts, and Daniel Morgan Murder Suspects
Forget phone hacking. It’s just the tip of an iceberg. Much more invasive illegal press practices are coming to light. Paddy French has more detail.
The IPCC Investigation into Former Met Commissioner
The role of Lord Stevens in the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry, and allegations that the Metropolitan Police failed to disclose important evidence
Beyond Bullying: Some Unanswered Questions about the Outing of Abby #Milifandom
The tussle between a 17-year-old political activist and a Sun columnist is distracting us from a bigger issue – how the paper tracked her family down
Magic Johnson and the Bully-Boys
Rebekah Brooks and Graham Johnson: Our Response
Cameron at the Centre of the Bullingdon Club
A discovery of previously unpublished images from the history of Oxford’s Bullingdon club shows David Cameron in a less marginal place than before
Confessions of a Tabloid 'Extremist'
Will the Internet Swing This Election? Or Has the Press Just Lost It?
In the air war of the British General election, social media was like a hand-held stinger missile against the massed squadrons of the press
BYLINE FIRST WEEKEND ROUNDUP: 'Why Does It Have to Be So Complicated?'
GUIDO: From Blowing Up Parliament to Blowing It
How the iconoclastic Matt Drudge of the British political blogosphere became a party drone
Welcome to Byline
Surviving the Cynical Circus
From Che to Chavismo, Via Barcelona
San Francisco, 'A Very Dysfunctional City'
Peter Jukes: 'Debunking the Hoops, Scoops, Lies and Shenanigans'
'Trust Me, I'm an Economist' – an Interview with Ha-Joon Chang
Chomsky: 'I Don't Look at Twitter Because It Doesn't Tell Me Anything'
'Imagine a World Without Prostitution'
Three Way Gunfight in the Last Chance Saloon
Why does the newspaper that has consistently backed the winning prime minister for the last 36 years sound so panicked?