Winston Churchill waged war on paper over ‘fake news’ photo caption – The Guardian

It is one of the earliest examples of a politician accusing the media of fake news. And it illustrates that, despite having been a journalist himself, Winston Churchill had an ambivalent relationship with the press, praising it on occasions, attacking it on others.

Churchill had been incensed by a picture published on the back page of the Daily Herald on 4 June 1929, that showed him outside 11 Downing Street carrying a book with the title War clearly visible. The caption suggested that war was one of his favourite subjects.

Churchill insisted the photograph was a fake and ordered Edward Marsh, his private secretary, to write to the Heralds editor, William Mellor, expressing his outrage.

Marshs letter complained: Obviously your photographer, or someone at your office, has deliberately faked or forged a copy of the photograph which was published in the Daily Herald for the purpose of sustaining a prejudicial caption.

In response to the complaint, the Herald appealed to a rival, the right-wing Morning Post, which had employed a young Churchill as a correspondent three decades earlier.

The Posts experts examined the materials submitted to them and were unanimously agreed that they can find nothing in the negative to suggest that it is not perfectly genuine.

Other newspapers photographers had taken similar pictures of Churchill from slightly different angles and, although the lettering was not quite as legible as in the Herald, the title, on close inspection, was visible enough to corroborate the newspapers claim that it was genuine.

His refusal to back down when proven wrong is reminiscent of todays politicians who label criticism as 'fake news

The book Churchill was photographed with was in fact a recently published anti-war novel. It appears he casually picked a copy up and had forgotten ever having done so.

Churchill declined to apologise for his wrongful allegation and merely thanked the Herald for its assurance that the photograph had not been tampered with.

But this was not enough for Mellor, who demanded a complete and categorical withdrawal and apology. Churchill refused to give ground, arguing that the Heralds abusive campaign against him meant there was no need of making any further amends. The Herald, however, had the last word, with a cartoon depicting the book it suggested Churchill should read next, entitled The Manners of Gentlemen.

The row between politician and publisher is revealed in a new book, Winston Churchill, A Life in the News, by Professor Richard Toye of the University of Exeter, which shows that bad blood had existed between the two parties for the previous decade.

The left-wing paper had passionately opposed Churchills support for the White anti-Bolshevik forces in the Russian civil war, when he was secretary of state for war and air.

Churchill, in turn, had issued orders that the War Office was no longer to accommodate the Heralds journalists because their paper published propaganda of an essentially disloyal and subversive character.

Churchills cry of fake or forgery, and his refusal to back down when proven wrong, is reminiscent of todays politicians who label criticism of them as fake news, Toye said.

Of course, throughout his career Churchill did, periodically, praise the press as a healthy factor in politics because it drew attention to governments shortcomings. But his attack on the Herald was no one-off lapse.

Toyes book shows how, as an instinctive showman, and one of the first politicians to be a true global celebrity, Churchill exploited the media to spectacular effect. However, at times he wanted to silence dissent, not always on legitimate national security grounds, because he was nettled by criticism.

The relationship between Churchill and the Herald later improved. In 1936 the paper published articles revealing that Germany was importing huge quantities of materials used to make weapons. Churchill felt that this proved his suspicions about the Nazi regime and referred to the revelations in the Commons, praising the paper for refusing to shield its readers from unpleasant truths.

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Winston Churchill waged war on paper over 'fake news' photo caption - The Guardian

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