Ian Kirby

Ashcroft’s pig head ‘story’ would have been thrown out by any tabloid editor

When I was the News of the World's political editor, I was on the lookout for stories - and for scandal. That's what political journalists are paid for. But had I gone to Rebekah Brooks or Andy Coulson when they were editing and said that I had a story about David Cameron’s honourable member and a pig’s head, their first question would be: 'where’s the proof?' If I then told them I had it on good authority from an MP who swears he's seen a photograph but won’t go on the record, I would have been booted out of the office - only after being given a good kicking. As every political journalist knows there are lies, damn lies - and then the tales that MPs tell about their enemies.

Diary – 16 July 2011

It’s 4 p.m. on a Thursday and I am talking with an MP on the House of Commons terrace. My mobile phone rings. It’s my colleague Keith Gladdis, the northern correspondent for the News of the World. I tell him I’ll call him back: I’m with a contact, working on a story — thousands of jobs have been lost because civil servants fixed a deal with a German company. There’s not much point, he tells me. ‘We’ve all been fired. They are closing the paper.’ I make my excuses and leave. Papers normally fold after running out of money or readers. The News of the World had plenty of both: still profitable, still the largest Sunday sale on the planet. But we were sunk by appalling activities carried out in secret.