The press boys are back in town
Political Editor Gary Gibbon blogs on the implications of Andrew Mitchell’s resignation and what it says about the balance of power at the top.
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As Britain’s national broadcaster faces an internal collapse of management and a battle to regain trust from the public, Channel 4 News looks at how it can bounce back from crisis.
Hardly a month goes by before someone asks for another public inquiry. Channel 4 News asks: what’s the point?
Prime Minister David Cameron faces fresh embarrassment over text exchanges with former News International boss Rebekah Brooks, after messages between the pair were published by a newspaper.
Shares in newspaper group Trinity Mirror slump in early trading as four people, including former England boss Sven-Goran Eriksson, launch legal actions against its titles.
Political Editor Gary Gibbon blogs on the implications of Andrew Mitchell’s resignation and what it says about the balance of power at the top.
The new health secretary was not at his most assured in his speech to the Conservative Party conference. But he had messages for the social care and charities sectors.
The fate of British bankers is in the hands of 10 people tasked with reforming a culture of recklessness and crime. Meet the banking standards commission, who will tame the masters of the universe.
Mitchell’s statement to parliament was intended to “draw a line” under the alleged foul-mouthed tirade against police officers. But as Political Correspondent Michael Crick reports, it has done no such thing.
Ofcom rules that Sky, which is partially owned by the Murdoch family, should hold onto its broadcast licence in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal.
Swedish celebrity magazine Se & Hor (See & Hear) publishes photographs of the Duchess of Cambridge sunbathing topless and its sister publication in Denmark plans to do the same on Thursday.
The Irish Daily Star is to become the first publication in the British Isles to print pictures of the Duchess of Cambridge sunbathing topless while on holiday with Prince William in France.
When the heat’s on, the disaster’s recent, the record shows that the British state cannot be relied upon to do its job – protect and provide justice for the victims and their families.
Jeremy Hunt is the big winner from the reshuffle. But the move from culture to health will prompt head scratching from those who thought the Murdoch scandal had cut short his political life.
The Sun newspaper says publishing the naked photos of Prince Harry is a “crucial” test of Britain’s free press, but 850 people have already complained to the press watchdog about the move.
The CPS has announced it intends to bring charges over phone-hacking against Andy Coulson, former no. 10 communications boss, as well as Rebekah Brooks and 6 others. But might things go even further and on to another level in these investigations?