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Michael McDowell: Trump and Johnson are Murdoch’s useful idiots

Media magnate shares responsibility for free world’s plunge into existential crisis

Rupert Murdoch shares, with Donald Trump and Boris Johnson, ‘a predilection for division, polarisation and cynical exploitation of political fear rather than loyalty to civic cohesion, solidarity and the rule of law’. Photograph: Jason Reed/AFP/Getty Images

Max Hastings, the historian, journalist and newspaper editor, has both a sharp pen and a sharp intellect. Writing last weekend about the character of Boris Johnson, he delivered a devastating critique of the British prime minister’s character, proclivities and weaknesses.

All his criticisms rang true, coming as they did from a man with extended dealings with Johnson over many years. Disavowing any malice, Hastings in effect warned the Tory party and the world that Johnson is wholly unsuitable to hold the public office to which he was elected.

If half of what Hastings describes as the true Boris Johnson is correct, the inescapable implication is that the United Kingdom is now governed in large part by a deeply flawed opportunist with little or no commitment to the public good – something which he is incapable of distinguishing from his own sense of ambition and entitlement.

We should not forget that Trump – supported by Murdoch – set out to undermine the European Union politically and economically

The power of most of British print media and their slavish support of the Tory party and heretofore of Johnson himself raise the question as to whether they have led the UK into political disaster from which it will be very hard to retrieve itself.

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Tory-supporting editors seem torn between their desire to keep the Conservative party in office and their desire to propagate the notion that the UK is still a world power. Conversely, they fear that Johnson will bring the Tories electoral defeat in the form of a Keir Starmer-led Labour government. If Johnson imperils the Tory grip on power, they will ruthlessly abandon him. If there is still some reasonable hope that Johnson will survive and stave off Labour government, they may still back him.

Ambivalence

Nowhere is this deep-seated ambivalence more evident than in the editorial policy of Rupert Murdoch’s media. Hastings may have been writing in the Sunday Times but, so far, those papers have refrained from advocating the deposition of Johnson.

Murdoch’s underlying aim appears to be to leave Johnson a lifeline so long as that is remotely consistent with the pursuit of Murdoch’s overall quest for influence, power and a direct say in international affairs.

Donald Trump as he announces his candidacy for the US presidency: his comments about Mexicans have made him stand out in a crowded field of Republican candidates. Photograph: Christopher Gregory/Getty Images

Across the Atlantic, we see the recrudescence of Trumpism in all its ugliness. Murdoch’s Fox News is much to blame for the shocking polarisation of US politics which first took the form of the Tea Party and thereafter the cause of Donald Trump.

Trump, ably facilitated by Murdoch-controlled media, has successfully planted an enormous lie in the minds of four out of 10 American voters – at least – that Trump actually won the 2020 election and that Joe Biden cheated his way to office by falsifying and subverting American democracy.

Trump’s shameless persistence in this lie, even to the extent of condemning his former vice-president Mike Pence for failing to abort the 2020 election and his recent promise to pardon the January 6th Capitol insurrectionists, is worthy only of the lowest-grade politics of a third-rate tinpot dictatorship. But that is what is now on offer to American voters as the alternative to the faltering Biden presidency.

The influence of Murdoch cannot be doubted, as manifest in the US and in the UK. We should not forget that Trump – supported by Murdoch – set out to undermine the European Union politically and economically. Nor should we forget that the current occupation of Ottawa is supported by Trump’s followers in the United States.

The canary in the coal mine of UK democracy is an independent BBC. That too is high on Murdoch's target list

Murdoch must bear some responsibility for the free world’s plunge into an existential crisis in which he and his friends offer crude and dangerous populism as the only way out for anxious voters.

Division

Murdoch, Trump and Johnson share a predilection for division, polarisation and cynical exploitation of political fear rather than loyalty to civic cohesion, solidarity and the rule of law.

Murdoch knows as well as any that Johnson’s decision to support Brexit was based on a knife-edge evaluation of where his own political advantage lay rather than any deep-seated convictions about the wellbeing of the UK. But the weaknesses of Johnson and the dangerousness of Trump are prices that Murdoch seems willing to pay in pursuit of power and influence at national and international level.

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during an annual end-of-year news conference in Moscow. File photograph: Maxim Zmeyev/Reuters

As Hastings pointed out, Vladimir Putin and his cronies just laughed at Johnson’s recent efforts to deflect domestic attention from his own unsuitability for office by seeking to champion the people of Ukraine as their interlocutor with the Kremlin.

As I wrote here recently, the alliance between Xi’s China and Putin’s Russia, officially anointed in the run-up to the Beijing Winter Olympics, now threatens freedom and liberal democracy across the globe.

The canary in the coal mine of UK democracy is an independent BBC. That too is high on Murdoch’s target list.

There is something truly Orwellian about the relentless buy-out and subversion of political decency and the inconvenience of objective truth.