We’ve Been Here Before With David Davis And Kelvin McKenzie
WHEN press barons take on politics:
The prospect of Kelvin Mackenzie standing in Haltemprice and Howden on behalf of Rupert Murdoch reminds Leicestershire historians of the Harborough by-election of 1916. There, though there was a wartime truce between the main parties, the Liberal candidate Percy Harris (now best remembered as Matthew Taylor’s great-grandfather) faced a formidable opponent financed by the press baron Lord Northcliffe.
Thomas Gibson Bowles was the illegitimate son of a cabinet minister, the founder of Vanity Fair and The Lady, and the grandfather of the Mitford sisters. He had sat for King’s Lynn as both a Liberal and a Conservative. He stood in Harborough to protest against the Asquith government’s conduct of the war.
Percy Harris wrote in his memoirs: “The hoardings were covered with Daily Mail posters, ‘Buy Daily Mail and vote for Bowles,’ and a special issue of the Daily Mirror, then in Northcliffe’s hands, was published and delivered free to the voters.”
Harris won…

June 20th, 2008 at 11:50 pm
OK, delete Kelvin Mackenzie and substitute Kay Burley; surely the voters will warm to a woman who punches a photographer in the throat, sorry, puts up her hands in self-defence, when struck with a camera?
And lets hear it for Associated Press, whose commitment to the free exchange of information is exemplified by its banning the photographer in question from giving any interviews…