NOVANEWS
David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Ed Miliband met in private to discuss the terms of reference of a public inquiry into the scandal
Rare show of common resolve as MPs prepare to call for News Corp to drop BSkyB takeover bid
by Andrew Grice, Stephen Foley, Oliver Wright, Nigel Morris, Ian Burrell, Martin Hickman and Cahal Milmo/www.independent.co.uk
All three main political parties will today unite against the man they have spent decades wooing in an unprecedented attack on Rupert Murdoch and his business empire. The party leaders will order their MPs to vote for a motion calling for Mr Murdoch to abandon his takeover bid for BSkyB in the wake of the hacking scandal.
The show of unity came after a dramatic intervention by David Cameron. He made the decision after realising he could lose the vote in the House of Commons in the face of opposition from Labour and the Liberal Democrats. The mood in Downing Street was said to be “grim” yesterday.
The motion – which is now certain to be passed by an overwhelming majority – significantly increases the pressure on News Corp to abandon its bid for BSkyB entirely, amid still growing allegations of widespread corporate misgovernance at its UK subsidiary News International.
BSkyB shares fell a further 3 per cent on the news as the City concluded that the weight of public opinion now makes a deal almost impossible. In a day of developments:
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Two of the most senior policemen in the country accused News International of lying and prevaricating in the original police investigation;
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Scotland Yard admitted it had so far notified only 170 of the 4,000 suspected victims of phone hacking named in Glenn Mulcaire’s files;
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A Commons committee called for Rupert and James Murdoch to come in person to Parliament next Tuesday, alongside Rebekah Brooks, to be questioned on the scandal by MPs;
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David Cameron, Ed Miliband and Nick Clegg met in private to discuss the terms of reference of a public inquiry into the scandal.




