Ideas and Letters A newsletter showcasing the finest writing from the ideas section and the NS archive, covering political ideas, philosophy, criticism and intellectual history - sent every Wednesday. Weekly Highlights A weekly round-up of some of the best articles featured in the most recent issue of the New Statesman, sent each Saturday. The Culture Edit Our weekly culture newsletter – from books and art to pop culture and memes – sent every Friday. Green Times The New Statesman’s weekly environment email on the politics, business and culture of the climate and nature crises - in your inbox every Thursday. World Review The New Statesman’s global affairs newsletter, every Monday and Friday. The Crash A weekly newsletter helping you fit together the pieces of the global economic slowdown. Select and enter your email address Morning Call Quick and essential guide to domestic and global politics from the New Statesman's politics team. No matter that Mordaunt openly tweeted about the meeting then, or that the MCB is arguably Britain’s leading Muslim umbrella group and neither can, nor should, be ignored. No matter that this is an old story – the Sun reported on it at the time. Below, the strapline reads: “ is condemned for ‘dodgy judgement’.” The outsized headline instead proclaims: “Mordaunt flouted No 10 ban to meet boycotted group”, in reference to her meeting with the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) in February last year. It ignores the record-breaking heatwave, and largely passes over Sunday night’s TV leadership debate. It has instead pumped out Soviet-style propaganda and deployed every dirty trick in the book to boost Liz Truss, the favoured successor for Johnson supporters, by destroying Penny Mordaunt, the rival best-placed to prevent the Foreign Secretary reaching the final round against Rishi Sunak. It has singularly failed to perform the basic journalistic duty of holding them to account. It has made no genuine attempt to inform or enlighten its millions of conservative readers about the views and relative merits of the candidates. Since Johnson’s 7 July announcement that he would resign, the powerful but poisonous tabloid has abandoned any pretence of impartiality in the contest. It may very well be the Daily Mail and Paul Dacre, the editor-in-chief of the paper’s parent company DMG Media, that will ultimately determine who succeeds Boris Johnson. It is bad enough that a small, profoundly unrepresentative electorate of fewer than 200,000 Conservative Party members and MPs will choose the UK’s next prime minister for the third time in six years, but the truth is even worse.
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