Murdoch press reportedly killed stories to protect David Walliams

David Walliams’ relationship has been terminated with his publisher, Harper Collins, following allegations of ‘inappropriate behaviour’ towards junior female employees at the company. Now, the Daily Mail is reporting that their rivals at the Sun were killing stories related to Walliams:

Shield the abuser, pay off the victim

The allegations first surfaced in 2023, reportedly prompting an in-house lawyer to interview staff who worked with David Walliams. Several female employees were allegedly affected by Walliams’ behaviour, with the Daily Mail reporting that female employees were advised to ‘work in pairs’ around the star. Female employees were also ordered not to visit his house.

The Telegraph reports that one of the women ‘harassed’ by Walliams received a five-figure payout before leaving the publisher.

These revelations follow the incident on Britain’s Got Talent when Walliams was heard on microphone making sexist, derogatory comments about contestants on the show.

David Walliams: shielded by attack-dog lawyers and vested interests

The Daily Mail report that David Walliams was protected by the aggressive celebrity law firm, Schillings. Instead of holding Walliams to account for his behaviour, the victims were made to risk criminal proceedings against them if they dared speak out.

Adding more fuel to the fire, it’s reported that the Sun’s showbusiness reporters were instructed to kill any negative stories relating to the celebrity. Notably, Rupert Murdoch owns both Harper Collins and the Sun.

Bullies on pedestals and none the wiser

A billionaire media mogul has a significant monopoly on the information that the wider public see, which can have very real implications for wider society. Demonstrating the influence that his media empire grant him, Murdoch leveraged assurances from Keir Starmer that there would not be a Leveson 2.0 inquiry should Labour win in 2024. As James Wright wrote for the Canary in July of that year:

Rupert Murdoch family-owned News UK received “private assurances” that Keir Starmer’s Labour Party government would not carry out an inquiry into press standards, according to iNews. News UK-owned titles the Sun and the Sunday Times then endorsed Starmer, once they’d gotten assurances that Leveson 2 would not go ahead.

Leveson 2 is the would-be second part of the Leveson Inquiry into press standards. The first part was launched in 2011. That’s after Murdoch-owned and now defunct News of the World had been found to be hacking phones.

In light of these new revelations about David Walliams, it’s clear the government needs to break up these corrupt billionaire-owned media companies.

Featured image via FT

By Maddison Wheeldon

This post was originally published on Canary.