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31 October 2011updated 26 Sep 2015 10:01pm

Why I was wrong about the Star and the Express

The Desmond empire's decision to embrace the Health Lottery has not calmed the papers' editorial pol

By Steven Baxter

Back in March, a rather misguided but well-intentioned blogger wrote about Richard Desmond’s plans for a health lottery. “It could raise a lot of money for charity and it could mark the end of the bad old days for the Express and the Star,” wrote that fool, claiming that the philanthropic endeavour was aimed “with one eye on detoxifying his newspaper brands.”

This idiot blundered on: “Pandering to Little Englanders every now and again might have done a good job in retaining a few hardcore readers for the Express and the Star, but that kind of tactic might become a hindrance.” Oh, you have to wince.

The fool, if you haven’t realised by now, was me. A month on from the launch of the Health Lottery in a rainbow-coloured vomit of excitement, has anything really changed in the Desmond empire? Have these newspapers become milder, less rabid, more measured, as they now share an umbrella with the beneficent health lotto project? Well, it’s not looking tremendously promising. (The health lottery itself isn’t looking tremendously promising either, but that’s another story.)

I suppose the point I was making back in March was that it would be difficult to sell a message of positive, embracing, warm charity fun while at the same time selling a more divisive, cold, negative message about disliking foreigners. The lottery was launched at the end of September, with the Daily Express declaring it would “MAKE BRITAIN BETTER” and the Daily Star saying it was a “TONIC FOR BRITAIN”. But did the content of the papers continue in such a positive vein? At first the signs seemed promising. The Express on September 29 led with news that there would be “PAY RISE JOY FOR MILLIONS”. So far, so inoffensive. The Star said that Ed Miliband wanted to “BAN BIG BRO FUN”, neatly mentioning Channel 5’s flagship reality show. Cross-promotional as ever, and not entirely true, but not toxic. Not yet.

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As October began, though, there were signs that the feelgood factor wouldn’t last. “EU RAID ON OUR PENSIONS”, boiled the Express. “£42M CHILD BENEFIT SENT ABROAD”, grumbled the Sunday Express. “VICTORY IN BID TO QUIT EU”, roared the Express, next to a photo of Simon Cowell, who was, wouldn’t you know it, backing the Health Lottery (in a “FRENZY”, according to the Star). A temporary bit of actual news intervened with the acquittal of tabloid favourite Amanda Knox (tastefully reported to be “HAUNTED BY MEREDITH’S GHOST”, said the Star), and then the spleen returned.

The front page of the Express on October 14 proclaimed that “WORKERS ARE FIRED FOR BEING BRITISH”, next to the beaming smile of early 1990s celebrity Donna Air (who was “backing the health lottery”, shockingly enough). The headline might have led amateur readers to think that workers had been fired for being British, but a more thorough look at the words revealed it was a claim, made by an MP using parliamentary privilege, about a company and a forthcoming industrial tribunal, and not really quite as established a fact as it might at first have appeared.

In recent days, it’s accelerated, with an Express “Crusade” relaunched on October 17 to “GET US OUT OF THE EU”, a story saying “75% SAY QUIT THE EU NOW” (although the figures weren’t quite that clear cut), “THE GREAT EU REVOLT” on October 24 and “SCANDAL OF EU BETRAYAL” on October 25. It took a somewhat more sinister turn with “GERMANY WARNS OF WAR IN EUROPE” on October 27, above a story which, you may be not entirely knocked down with a feather to learn, didn’t exactly reflect Germany warning of a war in Europe. A day later, apparently, the FRENCH were sending “UNEMPLOYED TO BRITAIN ON CUT-PRICE TRAINS TO STEAL OUR JOBS.” (And do what with them? Take them back to France? “Haha, you English fools, I have stolen your £6-an-hour job in the kitchen in Spud-u-like and am transporting it to Marseille!”)

All those months ago, I had hoped that the arrival of the Health Lottery might spike the guns of the Express and Star a little, but I am not so sure it has. While the Star appears to have retreated from political front pages altogether for the time being, becoming more and more obsessed with celebrities (particularly female celebrities in their pants), the Express has ploughed the same old furrow. Those foreigners, stealing our jobs! Those Germans! War in Europe! Get us out now! Oh, and by the way, buy a lottery ticket – 21p from every pound goes to charity!

Whatever happens with the Health Lottery, it doesn’t appear its presence will, after all, be a calming influence on the editorial policy of its papers. Someone somewhere must have reasoned that the anti-EU stories flog papers, and that’s not going to stop anytime soon. It’s always a shame to say you were wrong, but I think I was.

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