The Daily Mail’s EIC Paul Dacre released a bonkers statement about the Mail’s ‘victory’

Yesterday, Prince Harry, Elton John and the other co-plaintiffs lost their civil case against the Daily Mail/ANL. The judge on the case used to be a lawyer who represented the British tabloids in court, if you can believe that. Like, when he was a lawyer, Justice Matthew Nicklin LOST a lawsuit brought by Prince Harry just three years ago. So this is very obvious payback. But to the Daily Mail’s editor-in-chief Paul Dacre, it’s a moment to reveal to the world that he gets high on his own supply. Dacre, who is 77 years old, has something resembling royalist-psychosis. His statement following the Daily Mail’s questionable legal victory was so unhinged that very few outlets are quoting more than a handful of sentences. Here’s Dacre’s statement in full:

Four years ago, lawyers for Prince Harry, Doreen Lawrence and Elton John accused the Mail, in a blaze of publicity, of placing bugs in homes, cars, cafés and landline phones. We described these charges – some related to stories that were over 30 years old – as “lurid and preposterous”. Today, in what was a momentous victory for the Mail, the High Court dismissed every single one of the 97 claims.

That is an OVERWHELMING vindication of our journalism.

The Mail’s famous front-page naming five thugs as Stephen Lawrence’s “MURDERERS”, could have seen me jailed for contempt of court. Instead, it triggered the McPherson Inquiry and the eventual jailing of two of the killers. Stephen’s father, Neville, says he owes the Mail everything. Why Baroness Lawrence – for whom we have always had profound respect and sympathy – chose to turn on both the paper, and the brilliant reporter who campaigned for justice for her son for over two decades, is something I will never be able to comprehend.

Prince Harry wrote a sad book which boasted about his killing of 25 Taliban, his drug-taking and, in cringe-making detail, how he lost his virginity. There isn’t a laundry in the cosmos big enough to wash all the dirty linen he has aired about his own family. For him, to complain about HIS privacy being invaded takes, not just the biscuit, but the whole tin.

Poor Harry. I feel sorry for the way a confused and angry young man has been drawn into this case. The bitter irony is that his mother, Diana, liked the Mail. We were her paper. We took her side in her acrimonious break up with Charles. She and I would speak and meet. The Mail’s superb royal reporter was her friend and confidante.

The truth is that this trumped-up action – which has cost well over £50million and wasted a huge amount of valuable court time – should never have been brought to trial. That it did, raises profoundly disturbing questions about the conduct of elements of the legal profession.

Today’s verdict is not just a victory for Associated’s magnificent journalists – several of whom have had a terrible toll imposed on their health and lives – but a free press generally. Make no mistake. This was a conspiracy, supported by Hacked Off, to destroy a paper.

Financed by the orgy-loving, racist Max Mosley and involving the actor Hugh Grant, it was also a sinister bid to resuscitate Leveson Two and impose statutory regulation on the press which, even now, is rearing its ugly head in Labour’s Media Green Paper.

Some of the allegations made by Harry’s lawyers against the Mail involved Peter Mandelson and Jeffrey Epstein. They were rejected by the Court. But remember it was the power of the Mail’s journalism that, not once, but twice, resulted in Mandelson being sacked as a minister. And it was the Mail on Sunday’s exclusive picture of Prince Andrew, with his arm around 17 year old Virginia Guiffre in Ghislaine Maxwell’s home, that, ultimately, resulted in justice for Epstein’s underage victims.

Such justice only happened, as with Stephen Lawrence, because of the actions of a free press.

[Statement via The Royalist Substack]

The mention of Diana will undoubtedly infuriate Harry, but I hope he doesn’t take the obvious bait. Dacre shows his hand over and over – this wasn’t merely about the massive coverup around the Mail’s decades of dirty deeds, it was about trying to stop Leveson 2, another huge reckoning for the British media. Speaking of Hacked Off, they released a statement as well:

Today’s judgment finds that, in respect of the small number of articles which formed the basis of claims against the Mail’s publisher ANL, the claimants had not done enough to prove that unlawful means were relied upon to source the stories. The fact that the articles were deeply intrusive, and in some cases sexist and homophobic, was not in dispute in the case.

Commenting, Hacked Off Board Director and victim of phone hacking Jacqui Hames said,

“The stories and conduct which formed the basis for the claims against the Mail were devastatingly intrusive, and included medical details, information about children, and other deeply invasive behaviour and coverage.

“The Mail’s conduct fell well short of professional standards in the press, yet nothing has changed in the last twenty years and news publishers like the Mail still remain outside any independent form of regulation. Action to address standards in the press is long overdue, and must be a priority for the incoming administration.

“The courts are not the appropriate vehicle for investigating the allegations of wrongdoing against the Mail in their fulness, and the judgment was clear in stating that, focusing on a handful of individual articles, the Court had not made findings on whether illegality was widespread at the Mail. Now only a public inquiry can get to the bottom of what really happened. Leveson Part Two must proceed without further delay.”

[From Hacked Off]

Yeah, British people are going to be waiting a lot longer for Leveson 2. This judgment has done irreparable damage to media-watchdogging and to citizens who simply do not want their lives torn apart by an invasive, racist, sexist and criminal tabloid media.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red.

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26 Responses to “The Daily Mail’s EIC Paul Dacre released a bonkers statement about the Mail’s ‘victory’”

  1. YankeeDoodles says:

    THIS is what will sink them in the public mind. Over-egging it. The British are looooong since accustomed to seeing premature self-congratulation as the surest sign of imminent implosion. Their psychological / historical / political / existential calculus is tilted to identify hubris and run in the other direction. Think Churchill in the House of Commons after Hitler occupied France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Austria, Poland, and Czechoslovakia. Not that the Daily Fail is an outlet worthy of Goebbels. But — it bears remembering — the original mandate of the paper was to advocate for a far-right political agenda that was, in the interwar period, largely indistinguishable from Fascism on the Spanish / Italian model.

  2. Brit says:

    These people are abhorrent. He knew what he was doing bringing up his mother. This was to humiliate and break him so he wouldn’t do it again. This is about control and fear. The problem is that Harry still removed himself and his family from that ecosystem and it’s only a matter of time before it backfires on the rest of them. Harry still won in the end because he’s not beholden to the press like his father and brother. The daily mail is still trash and unreliable and the family is still boring and bland without the Sussexes. And by next week, these same newspapers will still be obsessing over a couple in California because the same couple they despise are the same ones that pay their bills, lol. They were all outside Chatham house like hyenas wanting to get close to Harry, trying to get past his security. So really who is the loser here?

  3. Sam says:

    It’s all just so sick!!! The justice system in England is just as bad and corrupt as the one in the US!!! I’m so glad I live in Germany.. yes, there are unfortunately plenty of bad judges here who make misogynistic rulings, but we don’t have this level of blatant corruption here (yet). I am so shocked and disgusted. There is no longer a free press in England. Not one. Not even the Guardian. In Germany, the judge’s past and the reasons behind his ruling would be all over the front pages of the newspapers. Why isn’t anyone there talking about it??? Why is there no public outcry?? After all, it affects the citizens there too, doesn’t it?

    • YankeeDoodles says:

      As a recovering Germanophile, married to a german, former German school parent, former employee of Deutsche Bank, ….it can be easy to attribute virtue to people who simply refuse to admit their system cantilevered to a political agenda. It is Olympian, detached, virtue incarnate… until it isn’t. Until you catalogue the examples of moral turpitude and mercenary interest: Volkswagen, Deutsche Bank (Trump’s bank of choice!!!), Siemens, etc….. there is an epic amount of commercially motivated moving of goal posts. Take away the money, and ….not so puffed-up. The right to privacy, the right to reply, the right to revise, the right to be immune from accountability in the court of public opinion… it’s 180- degrees opposite to the US / UK, where it *all* plays out on a public stage. That doesn’t make it incorruptible. It’s just an inside baseball game. Really. Best to take off the rose-tinted specs now. Bless and good luck!!!! They so some things well. But the Pollyanna stuff, “this would never happen in Germany!” ….I wish I could say, LOL. Sadly, all I can do, is shake my head. And smile.

  4. Lady Esther says:

    And to think Dacre could have been head of Ofcom, the UK media regulator…What a mess Britain’s media is!

  5. Nlopez says:

    I dont believe Diana really considered any tabloid press people to be her real friends. She needed them to get her story out there, and they used and exploited her at whim because she sold papers. I understand Harry’s rage at how they treated his mother, but I hope he ignores them too.

    • Brit says:

      She didn’t. I think Diana was desperate because they were doing to her, what they’re doing to Harry. She did what they want Harry to do. Run to press and give them stories. I really think they wanted to force Harry to heel by abusing his wife but she didn’t cave either. Harry needs to just blank that family entirely and leave them alone. After 2027 Invictus, leave England alone and if you go there, say nothing to that family. That family is demented and there is no humanity.

      • GTWiecz says:

        That’s my advice to him if I were his mother. Cut that horrible father off completely, don’t attend his funeral, don’t ever answer the phone if it’s him or his PR people, and forget about that whole family of cruel parasites.

        Go to your birth country whenever you want, don’t tell them beforehand. You owe them nothing at all.

        I’d like Charles Spencer to be more vocal, but I think he’s afraid of affecting the tourism to Allthorp. His speech at Diana’s service was one for the ages.

  6. YankeeDoodles says:

    Whoa!!!! I only just read the following paragraph, which was pointedly removed from the Times’ coverage which I had already digested this morning as I have a subscription and open the Times app when I pour my first coffee of the day: “Some of the allegations made by Harry’s lawyers against the Mail involved Peter Mandelson and Jeffrey Epstein. They were rejected by the Court. But remember it was the power of the Mail’s journalism that, not once, but twice, resulted in Mandelson being sacked as a minister. And it was the Mail on Sunday’s exclusive picture of Prince Andrew, with his arm around 17 year old Virginia Guiffre in Ghislaine Maxwell’s home, that, ultimately, resulted in justice for Epstein’s underage victims.” ……that is a whole separate can of worms, kettle of fish, Pandora’s box….. and it feels like he is sending up smoke signals, or dog whistles, to someone, but that person is not Harry. Is this him threatening Charles? His mention of Diana could also be interpreted in that light. The papers are plausibly *still* sitting on revelations Diana provided them, before Harry met Meghan. Looooong before that.

  7. Harriet says:

    Yup, they overplayed their hand.
    If you are going to steal, leave a few crumbs!
    The dismissal of all 97 counts is literally UNBELIEVABLE.

    The public just saw Chuck fiddle with the RAVEC rulings and now this.
    Not showing the monarchy is a good light.
    Chuck is going to need a bigger tank.

  8. Becks1 says:

    He’s unhinged. What an unprofessional crazy screed.

  9. Lady Digby says:

    Paul Dacre actually thinks that because Harry produced a biography that he has No entitlement to privacy!? Also all the invasive articles on Liz Hurley ‘ son and Sadie Frost:s ectopic pregnancy how was this level of intrusive into someone,’s medical privacy justified? Both are famous so they have NO right to privacy at all? Why is any this any body else’s business? Paul Dacre seems to suggest that if you are in the the public eye then his newspaper can print any articles on you and you have no right to privacy?

  10. Miranda says:

    The “Harry doesn’t really care about privacy, look at Spare!” narrative, this willful misinterpretation of his desire to simply share his own story on his own terms, never fails to infuriate me. It’s like saying that a woman who has an OnlyFans can’t be raped because “look what she does on camera!”

    Also, f–k all the way off with that “boasted of killing 25 Taliban” shit. Harry did not boast. He made it perfectly clear that it’s not something he actively took pride in doing.

    • Lady Digby says:

      Feminegra explores this here: The double standard is also glaring. When Harry’s private life was being leaked, briefed, packaged and sold, that was treated as normal royal reporting. Palace sources, old friends, former acquaintances and media insiders were allowed to narrate his life for profit. But when Harry finally gave his own account, suddenly everyone discovered the sacred value of privacy and loyalty. They were fine with him being talked about. They just hate that he now talks back.
      The absolute effrontery of Paul Dacre saying Harry has no right to tell his own life story when his rag has made a fortune out of writing BS about him, his entire life.

      • Mairzy Doats says:

        Plus the dozens of books various people have written about Harry over the years, yielding profits to those writers, but Harry isn’t allowed to tell his own story.

  11. Jais says:

    Whoa, yes, that is unhinged. Way to reveal your true villainy, my god.

  12. Dee(2) says:

    I mean they aren’t even trying to hide their cartoonish supervillainy are they? I said before but there is a definite sense of entitlement when it comes to the British media, but this takes the cake. He seems to believe that people exist for the sole purpose of him being able to exploit them in the news.

    And I think that the fact that Harry and Meghan won’t play ball is what frustrating not only the media, but the royal family as well. They are cowards so they don’t understand why he’s making so much fuss, to them him going to court being dragged through the mud, and potentially not winning the cases it’s too much.

    I think for Harry he’s intelligent enough to know that you win some or you lose some, but I don’t think he would be able to look himself in the mirror if he saw what they were doing not only didn’t object to it, but also participated.

  13. ChillinginDC says:

    This was insane.

  14. Amy Bee says:

    Dacre sounds like a deranger.

  15. Kylie says:

    @dee, Intelligent enough? That’s one of the most demeaning things I’ve read. Wow, Intelligent enough…

    • Dee(2) says:

      What are you talking about? It’s an idiom and turn of phrase. Harry is intelligent and realizes that he won’t always win, taking the stand is what is most important.

  16. Jay says:

    This is the kind of unhinged all-caps rambling you might expect from someone posting on Facebook at 2 am, not a statement published by actual news! Evidently nobody at the DM is willing to give their dear leader much-needed editing. Yikes!

    I also think it’s worth pointing out that if there was no illegal activity from the DM, which I for one do not believe, the only other sources for many of the stories about Harry were from within the royal circle. So, if the judgment is saying that the DM didn’t hack Harry’s phone or voicemails and instead are simply brilliant journalists 🙄, then the only way to get such specific details is having sources within the various palaces willing to leak or trade information about Harry in exchange for positive coverage. So the judge may have cleared the DM, but in doing so pointed the finger right back at the royal family! I hope people ask them about it as they’re all out and about this week.

    • tamsin says:

      @Jay
      Exactly. I was thinking the same yesterday. Since the judge said that details and stories may have come from perfectly legitimate sources, when who are they? The palaces? When is a real journalist and not a propaganda mouthpiece going to explore THAT question?

  17. bisynaptic says:

    Can they appeal this verdict? How was a judge who had made a career defending tabloids, who had already lost to the litigants, not required to recuse himself?

  18. Cathy says:

    Why did Paul Darce mention Max Mosley? Is there something going on there behind the scenes?

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