Rebekah Brooks today denied using her clout to get her own way with
Government ministers.
The former News International chief executive told the Leveson Inquiry
she did not threaten to put Home Secretary Theresa May on the front page
of The Sun if she did not order a review into Madeleine McCann's
disappearance.
She also denied demanding that David Cameron "move" shadow home
secretary Dominic Grieve after his views were expressed during a heated
dinner conversation.
Ms Brooks told the inquiry The Sun and Sunday Times serialised the book
written by Kate and Gerry McCann and helped them in their efforts to get
a review into the case by the Metropolitan Police.
But she said she did not speak to Downing Street or the Home Office
about the issue, though Sun editor Dominic Mohan or current political
editor Tom Newton-Dunn may have done.
She denied intervening personally, telling the inquiry: "I did not say
to the Prime Minister, 'I will put Theresa May on the front page of the
Sun every day unless you give me a review', I did not say that."
She also denied suggestions she told David Cameron he should not have
Dominic Grieve, now Attorney General, as home secretary, after he
disagreed with colleagues about the Human Rights Act.
Ms Brooks said she was at a shadow cabinet dinner where Mr Grieve said
the Conservatives should not be promising to repeal the Human Rights Act
and replace it with a British bill of rights.
"The dinner conversation was quite heated as he was the only one at the
table saying, 'actually'..," she told the inquiry.
"I admired him standing up to his shadow colleagues like that, and as I
say, in the end he's turned out to be correct."
She denied telling Mr Cameron, who she said was not at the dinner: "You
can't have someone like that as Home Secretary, he won't appeal to our
readers", and said she had not shared her views with him.
"In fact, Mr Osborne and Mr Cameron did the opposite to me, where they
were at pains to explain that Mr Grieve's view, which has now proved to
be entirely correct, was absolutely not their view and they were going
to repeal the HRA and replace it with a British bill of rights, and that
Mr Grieve was mistaken."
Mrs Brooks also told the inquiry she had not told Ed Balls to fire
former Haringey head of children's services Sharon Shoesmith over the
Baby P scandal.
"I think he was well aware we had called for her resignation, it was all
over the paper," she said.
"I did not tell Ed Balls to fire Sharon Shoesmith. It was obvious in our
paper that we had launched a petition because the government were
refusing to do anything about the situation."
She said she spoke to Mr Balls, and also to a shadow minister, possibly
Michael Gove, at the time, adding: "I would have spoken to anybody,
basically, to try and get some justice for Baby P, which was the point
of the campaign." |