Jeremy Corbyn delivered a personal message to Paul Dacre in his key note speech at the Labour conference today, claiming the Daily Mail editor helped boost the party’s vote share.

The Labour leader said the Mail “devoted 14 pages to attacking the Labour Party” on the day before the snap general election in June, adding: “The following day our vote went up nearly ten per cent.”

He said: “Never have so many trees died in vain. The British people saw right through it. So this is a message to the Daily Mail’s editor: next time, please make it 28 pages.”

The Mail’s coverage included a front page with pictures of Corbyn, Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell and Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott under the headline: “Apologists for terror”.

The paper said: “The Mail accuses this troika of befriending Britain’s enemies and scorning the institutions that keep us safe.”

In the run up to polling day The Sun used a front page headline to appeal to its readers: “Don’t chuck Britain in the Cor-Bin”. It also claimed Corbyn had given a speech at a demo attended by followers of Islamist hate preachers in a front page story headlined: “Jezza’s Jihadi Comrades”.

Corbyn said the media “ran the campaign they always do, under orders from their tax exile owners, to trash Labour at every turn”.

The MP for Islington North added: “The campaign by the Tories and their loyal media was nasty and personal and it fuelled abuse online – and no-one was the target of that more than Diane Abbott.

“Diane has a decades-long  record of campaigning for social justice and she suffered intolerable misogynist and racist abuse. Faced with such an overwhelmingly hostile press and an army of media and social trolls it’s even more important that we stand together.

“Yes, there will be times when we disagree, but there can never be any excuse for any abuse of anybody by anybody we are not having it, not tolerating it, not accepting it and not allowing it.”

Abbott pulled out of two planned media appearances due to illness during the election campaign following after she was criticised in the media for muddling police funding figures in an interview with LBC’s Nick Ferrari.

Corbyn’s comments today follow a call from the Society of Editors for the Labour leadership “to speak from the platform during their conference to condemn threats of violence and verbal abuse from whatever quarter”.

It came after reports that BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg has been assigned a bodyguard to cover the Brighton conference following threats from online trolls who claim her reporting is biased.

In his speech yesterday, Labour deputy leader Tom Watson said Rupert Murdoch’s papers “did their best to start a Tory landslide”.

He said: “They threw the kitchen sink at Jeremy but this time it wasn’t The Sun what won it and let me tell you conference, it will never again be The Sun what won it.”

Picture: Reuters/Peter Nicholls

Labour deputy leader Tom Watson said the party used digital platforms “instead of our biased media” to get its message out to the electorate during this year’s general election.

The Shadow Culture Secretary also told the party’s conference in Brighton yesterday that “it will never again be The Sun what won it” after claiming owner Rupert Murdoch “threw the kitchen sink” at Jeremy Corbyn during the election campaign in a bid to “start a Tory landslide”.

Pro-Labour and anti-Tory stories dominated on social media during the election campaign, according to Press Gazette analysis of Buzzsumo data.

Watson said: “This year, conference, together we rewrote the rules of politics. We overcame fear and we took the country with us using the digital platforms instead of our biased media we talked straight to the people and they heard our message and in contrast to that last September Theresa May had a secret meeting with Rupert Murdoch in New York.

“Nine months later at the election Murdoch’s papers did their best to start a Tory landslide. They threw the kitchen sink at Jeremy but this time it wasn’t The Sun what won it and let me tell you conference, it will never again be The Sun what won it.”

Watson is opposed to Murdoch’s proposed £11.7bn takeover of Sky by 21st Century Fox, which is set to be referred to the competition watchdog for further scrutiny.

The MP for West Bromwich East has called for the government to press ahead with part two of the Leveson Inquiry.

The UK’s national newspapers were overwhelmingly pro Tory at the last election. However, the outcome was far closer than expected with the Conservatives chosen by 42.4 per cent of voters and Labour a close second on 40 per cent resulting in a hung parliament.

Picture: BBC

Thanks to Press Gazette

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