Wordy again part two

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‘I’d better use accurate words in this story…’

During 42 years in journalism (when he was trained to use simple language, avoiding jargon) for our Editor, Welshman Phil Parry, choosing EXACT words is paramount, but sadly it’s not the case with others, so here we offer our second ‘word (or words) of the year’ – ‘Witch hunt’…

 

It’s used so often now (usually absurdly) that it is a natural selection as The Eye’s second ‘word (or words) of the year – ‘witch hunt’.

For Jair Bolsonaro as well as for Donald Trump, his trial was part of a ‘witch hunt against him…

Donald Trump, for example, apparently finds it a helpful prop all the time (in RIDICULOUS circumstances).

He of course uttered it when his close ally Jair Bolsonaro went on trial accused of plotting a military coup (losing the case), and it was inevitable really because Mr Trump had already posted it on the internet.

On July 9 United States of America (USA) ministers were in a cabinet meeting when Mr Trump published a letter online announcing tariffs of 50 per cent on Brazilian imports, citing a “Witch Hunt that should end immediately!” (referring to the legal charge against Mr Bolsonaro).

Jair Bolsonaro and Donald Trump were kindred spirits

However let us remind ourselves of the details. On January 8 2023, after Mr Bolsonaro (often called “The Trump of the Tropics”) lost his re-election bid, thousands of protesters – clad in the canary-yellow Brazil football shirts that have become emblematic of his right-wing movement – stormed government buildings and court houses.

Rioters broke into the Presidential Palace, Congress and Supreme Court, leaving a trail of vandalism behind them. and to many, it felt almost identical to January 6 2021, when supporters of Mr Trump stormed the Capitol in Washington DC, after he too failed to accept he had lost an election.

The riots in Brazil left a trail of devastation in their wake…

But this is FAR from the only time that the tired phrase ‘witch hunt’ has been wheeled out, and Mr Trump is seemingly a great believer in the power of wielding it.

For example he said the embezzlement case against Marine Le Pen was a ‘witch hunt’, although the background is disturbing as she had been handed a five-year ban on running for office after a court found her and two dozen figures from her National Rally (RN) party guilty of embezzling European Union (EU) funds.

Donald Trump said Marine Le Pen’s conviction was a ‘bookkeeping error’

Mr Trump also demanded all the legal cases against him be dismissed (the one about him storing top secret documents on the ballroom stage at his huge home in Florida was thrown out by a judge appointed during HIS administration!), proclaiming (naturally) that his appearance in a court room was all part of the “witch-hunt” against him.

He was convicted of falsifying business records over payments made to the porn actress Stormy Daniels to cover up their alleged affair. Apart from calling the proceedings a “witch-hunt”, Mr Trump described the judge as a “disgrace” for refusing his legal team’s application that this was all a mistrial.

Judge Arthur Engoran did not look kindly on attempts by Donald Trump to derail the case against him

The judge in ANOTHER case, Arthur Engoron, ruled that Mr Trump had:

  • Overvalued his Florida home Mar-a-Lago by 2,300 per cent in one financial statement.
  • Overvalued his Penthouse at Trump Tower in New York by claiming that it was three times its actual size.
  • “Absurdly” argued that calculating the area of the Penthouse was subjective, with the judge saying that “a discrepancy of this order of magnitude, by a real estate developer sizing up his own living space of decades, can only be considered fraud”.
Mugshot of Donald Trump taken by the police

But, of course, Mr Trump said the case was another political “witch hunt” brought by a prosecutor who was ‘biased’ against him, and he accused the judge of being “highly politicised” (as though he ISN’T!).

In the bi-partisan House of Representatives investigation into the riot which was at the centre of another of his legal problems (as with Mr Bolsonaro), it was revealed that Mr Trump had engaged in a “multi-part conspiracy”, yet he attacked the results of their 18-month long inquiry, by saying on the same platform: “The highly partisan Unselect Committee Report purposely fails to mention the failure of Pelosi to heed my recommendation for troops to be used in DC, show the “Peacefully and Patrioticly” words I used, or study the reason for the protest, Election Fraud. WITCH HUNT!”.

Mr Trump is not the only one, though.

‘This is not a cult, this is a WITCH HUNT!’

There is enormous controversy now about a South Korean alleged ‘cult’ called ‘Grace Road’, and it was employed in this saga too. The organisation owns the ‘Snowy House’ coffee chain in Fiji, as well as an empire of organic supermarkets, patisseries, pizza restaurants and other businesses across the island, and in a booklet it was declared:  “To our esteemed customers and the people of Fiji, Grace Road Group has been under a constant witch-hunt”.

It was used as well, in the extraordinary ruckus to have engulfed the right wing party Reform UK, when Rupert Lowe, the MP for Great Yarmouth was suspended from the party over allegations of bullying and making verbal threats of violence to the chairman, which the 67-year-old strenuously denies.

He is now described as an ‘independent’ on his Wikipedia profile, and in Mr Lowe’s telling his only crime was to have crossed party leader, Nigel Farage (who has been accused of racism and anti-Semitism when he was younger).

The “Messiah”?

His suspension followed an interview in the Daily Mail in which he described Reform UK as a “protest party led by the Messiah”, and he later claimed that he had been “entirely frozen out” of the party machinery.

But there are MORE examples! Another instance is how it was used by the former Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, against critics who have condemned parties which were held in Number 10 or the garden, while everyone else was governed by lockdown rules.

Marine Le Pen walked out of court even before the embezzlement verdict was announced!

It was screamed out, too, in the row between Brussels and Warsaw, after Poland’s top court rejected the supremacy of EU laws, in a country where the nationalist Law and Justice party governed at the time. Polish judges had opposed the basic principle of EU legal primacy – a core pillar of the bloc’s rules order that all member states sign up to on joining. They repudiated significant articles of the EU treaties, including that member states will take “appropriate measures” to fulfil their obligations under EU law, and politicians as well as legal scholars have described the move as a “legal Polexit” which jeopardised Poland’s access to EU funds, along with the rights of its largely pro-EU population. Yet after Ms Le Pen, met Mateusz Morawiecki, the Polish prime minister, at the time when he was hauled over the coals by his fellow leaders for this, she accused the EU of conducting a “witch-hunt”against Poland using “unacceptable blackmail”.

Binyamin Netanyahu saying Donald Trump is the greatest friend that Israel has ever had in the White House

This was as the contentious right-wing Israeli Prime MinisterBinyamin Netanyahu, had been put on trial for alleged corruption, when he had also accused his detractors of orchestrating a politically motivated “witch-hunt” against him. Mr Netanyahu denied charges that he received illegal gifts from wealthy benefactors, and conspired with press barons to change media laws as well as regulations in return for favourable coverage. He was in court in the first criminal trial ever against a sitting Israeli leader. Mr Netanyahu had tried to pass laws that would have granted him immunity from prosecution, but failed to gain the necessary majority.

Sacked former Vice-Chancellor of Swansea University Richard Davies and the ex-School of Management Dean Marc Clement who lost his claim of unfair dismissal

It has been employed even closer to home – in Wales. During the extraordinary controversy at scandal-hit Swansea University (SU), where the police investigated alleged bribery in a multi-million pound land deal when senior officials including the ex-Vice-Chancellor (VC) Richard Davies, and the then head of his School of Management Marc Clement, were sacked for “gross misconduct”, it obviously featured.

Hilary Lappin-Scott

In the long-running saga, support had been clear for the contentious previous Pro Vice-Chancellor (PVC)Hilary Lappin-Scott, who, The Eye exclusively revealed, was to leave. An unbelievable anonymous campaign in her defence was undertaken using gmail or email, with messages sent to staff at SU as well as senior journalists (including me) and Welsh politicians.

One message said:  “Only Hillary (sic) can save Professor Boyle (Vice-Chancellor [VC] at SU) from the same incompetents that undermined Richard Davies’ stellar transformation of your Institution for the Region”. Another read:  “Last week’s email was blocked – here it is below for completeness’ sake. Ask yourself: what else is the leadership keeping from you?… Why is this witch hunt therefore still continuing?”.

However my journalists have shown how Professor Lappin-Scott had enraged her staff at SU, by sending tweets from glamorous parts of the world on university ‘business’, and the exploits became the subject of The Eye’s satirical writer. Despite this, the anonymous communications have claimed in the past that Professor Lappin-Scott would lead the university to “an era of gold and honey”.

The now renamed ‘Wellness’ village project was put under investigation

The term ‘witch-hunt’ was used, too, as inquiries continued into the £200 million pound Pentre Awel (Breezy Village) (previously known as the ‘Wellness Village’) land deal at Llanelli where the police were called in.

The troubled institution has confirmed that apart from looking into the campaign itself, the police were involved in investigating alleged bribery during this so-called ‘witch-hunt’. An official statement from Swansea’s ‘Associate Director Vice-Chancellor’s Office, Head of Legal and Compliance Services’ stated: Alongside the University’s internal disciplinary process, there is also on-going police involvement (i) with regard to the issues uncovered during the University’s investigation; and (ii) anonymous communications sent to University staff relating to the suspensions and disciplinary processes. The matters under investigation are very serious. The University has invested a significant amount of resource investigating the alleged misconduct, as have the authorities. It is essential that nothing is done to undermine the on-going processes. They must be allowed to run their course without interference.”

Crooked ‘academic’ Steve Chan was hired by Swansea University

The stunning ‘witch-hunt’ campaign at the university also formed a worrying backdrop to an exclusive disclosure on The Eye, that officials had hired a fraudster called Steve Chan who worked on a contract at the management school, and after my journalists there were alone in revealing how a previous Dean accused of bullying had died.

They showed how, apparently unknowingly, officials had even allowed Chan to represent the university in advising an international agency on the ways to combat fraud!

Chan had been imprisoned by a court in Boston, USA, for four years and three months, and ordered to pay millions of dollars in compensation. His jail sentence was followed by three years of supervised release, after he admitted one count of conspiracy to commit fraud and one count of mail fraud, he was also ordered to pay restitution of $12,596,298.

Phil got angry at being called a ‘troll’…

But the campaign inside SU alleging a ‘witch-hunt’ has been covered only partially by the mainstream media, and had been conducted ever since the incredible investigation was launched.

In part, one recent gmail to staff (and me) as well as the Chair of the SU council read: “Why are these things happening and being leaked to Sion Barry (the Western Mail Business Editor) and, in turn, Phil Parry (someone trolling Professor Hillary [sic] Lappin-Scott) whilst in the middle of an independent internal investigation?”. Another added:  “Appended below you can find the previous installments (American spelling) and claims there has been “A trial by media, a kangaroo court, a selection of evidence and suspensions before interviews – almost as if the facts were at odds with the desired outcome”. Although again misspelt a further gmail was clear in the search for a new VC: “Please Hillary (sic) (Lappin-Scott) out (put?) your hat back in the ring!”.

Four of the questions asked in a Freedom of Information Act FOIA request about Chan were:

  • What was the exact date that Professor Steve Chan of the School of Management registered for his Ph.D at Swansea University? 
  • What was the exact date that he undertook his viva voce examination for his Ph.D? 
  • Who were the members of his Ph.D viva committee (including external examiners)? 
  • Who approved the appointment of the supervisors for his Ph.D? 
‘READ MY BOOK!’

But, of course, questions like these may be part of a ‘WITCH HUNT’, The Eye’s second ‘word (or words) of the year’.

 

The memories of Phil’s decades long award-winning career in journalism (when words were always chosen carefully) as he was gripped by the rare neurological disease Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia (HSP), have been released in a major book ‘A GOOD STORY’. Order it now.

On New Year’s Day tomorrow – he looks at the extraordinary sums now in football, with Semenyo likely to join Man City in the January transfer window, triggering an eye-watering release clause of £65 million (which is actually quite low!).