Joe Haines (journalist)

Joseph Thomas William Haines (born 29 January 1928) is a British journalist and former press secretary to Labour Party leader and Prime Minister Harold Wilson.

Joe Haines
Downing Street Press Secretary
In office
1969–1970
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded byTrevor Lloyd-Hughes
Succeeded byDonald Maitland
Downing Street Press Secretary
In office
1974–1976
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded byRobin Haydon
Succeeded byTom McCaffrey
Personal details
Born
Joseph Thomas William Haines

(1928-01-29) 29 January 1928 (age 96)
Rotherhithe, London, England
Political partyLabour
OccupationPress secretary, journalist

Early life and career edit

Born in Rotherhithe, then an impoverished area of London with appalling housing conditions, Haines was the youngest child of a dock worker who died when he was 2. His mother, a cleaner at a hospital, brought up the family. He joined the Labour Party as a teenager.[1] At 14, he became a copyboy on the Glasgow Bulletin, and then a lobby reporter at Westminster in 1950.[2]

In 1954, Haines became the political correspondent for George Outram & Co. in Glasgow, before moving to Edinburgh around 1960 to work for the Scottish Daily Mail. From 1964 he was employed by the pre-Murdoch Sun, and became Harold Wilson's press secretary in 1969.[3]

With Harold Wilson edit

In 1974, Wilson had a health scare over a racing heart complaint, but "I told the press, who believed me when I said that Harold had the flu," Haines recalled in 2004. "We had an economic crisis and we had a majority of three",[4] he explained.

In Glimmers of Twilight (2003),[5] Haines claims that Wilson's doctor Joseph Stone offered to murder Marcia Falkender, the head of Wilson's political office, after she attempted to blackmail Wilson over an affair they had twenty years earlier. The BBC, in an out-of-court settlement with Falkender, paid her £75,000 after these claims were repeated in The Lavender List, a drama documentary written by Francis Wheen and broadcast in 2006. Although Haines himself was not sued, as a libel action involving him as the source it is generally accepted[by whom?] that the BBC settled because the original claimant would not stand behind the story. The allegations relating to Stone were repeated in the BBC's documentary The Secret World of Whitehall (2011).[6]

Not long after Wilson's resignation as Prime Minister, Haines published a book The Politics of Power about his experience of British political life. Attention mainly concentrated on two chapters about Marcia Williams (now Falkender) and her influence. Haines claimed that Williams' troublesome presence had been the real cause of Wilson's resignation. What he wrote in the book contradicted Wilson's statement at the time of his resignation that when he came back to power in 1974, he had told the Queen that he would not continue after he had reached the age of 60. Some commentators, such as Brian Sedgemore, considered that The Politics of Power was an interesting account, but the chapters about Marcia Williams were the weakest in the book.

In a 2010 interview, Haines claimed that in the aftermath of the February 1974 general election, Harold Wilson had planned to discredit Liberal leader Jeremy Thorpe by exposing Thorpe's relationship with Norman Scott in the event of the Conservative government reaching an agreement with the Liberals that would have permitted it to remain in power.[7] Around the same time, Haines claimed that he had turned down a peerage from Wilson in the 1976 Prime Minister's Resignation Honours in part, he claimed, because he did not wish to be awarded one in a list also consisting of Joe Kagan and Eric Miller, who were suspected of criminal activity at the time.[8]

Later career edit

In 1976, he joined the Daily Mirror. At the time Robert Maxwell purchased Mirror Group Newspapers on 12 July 1984, Haines told a meeting of his colleagues that their new proprietor "is a crook and a liar – and I can prove it".[9][10]

Appointed the Mirror Group's political editor shortly after Maxwell's purchase of the Group, he also became a non-executive director of the board,[9] and from 1984 to 1990 he was the Mirror's assistant editor.[3] In 1988, the authorised biography by Haines of Robert Maxwell was published. The Mirror's then owner had commissioned the work to pre-empt a biography by investigative journalist Tom Bower, which Maxwell unsuccessfully attempted to have withdrawn. Haines' biography was generally considered to be encomium and was treated with a mixture of ridicule and extreme criticism by the media at the time of its release – The Times referred to it as "notorious". According to Tom Bower, Haines' biography was so flattering Maxwell would give out copies instead of business cards. A report in 2001[11] by the Trade and Industry Department inspectors into the collapse of Maxwell's business empire found that Haines "had accepted the position [with Maxwell] and ought to have discharged the responsibilities that went with the position. He therefore bears a limited measure of responsibility"[12] for the debacle.

In 1991, a few days after the death from HIV/AIDS of Queen's lead singer Freddie Mercury, the Daily Mirror ran a column authored by Haines[13][14] in which he described the late bisexual singer as "sheer poison - a man bent - the apt word in the circumstances - on abnormal sexual pleasures", accused him of "touring the streets seeking rent boys to bugger and share drugs with" and called Mercury's "private life" a "revolting tale of depravity, lust and downright wickedness". In addition, after mentioning that AIDS' "main victims in the Western world are homosexuals", Haines went on to say that for Mercury's "kind", AIDS is "a form of suicide". The article – characterised by others as filled with "rabid homophobia" – prompted an open letter in condemnation from folk singer Lal Waterson, later recorded as a song by her sister Norma as "Reply to Joe Haines".[15][16]

References edit

  1. ^ Haines, Joe (7 November 2014). "The Labour Party's big beasts must act to remove Ed Miliband now". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  2. ^ David Seymour "Joe Haines (1928–)" in Greg Rosen (ed.) Dictionary of Labour Biography, London: Politico's Publishing, 2001, p.246-47, 246
  3. ^ a b Dennis Griffiths (ed.) The Encyclopedia of the British Press, 1422–1992, London & Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1992, p.285
  4. ^ Michael Cockerell "Is the Downing Street patient fit for office?" Daily Telegraph, 27 February 2004. Retrieved on 15 July 2007.
  5. ^ Tom Utley "Who cares about a Downing Street murder plot?" Daily Telegraph, 5 October 2002. Retrieved on 15 July 2007.
  6. ^ Broadcast on 23 March 2011
  7. ^ "Episode 2". Day One in Number 10. Season 1. Episode 2. 19 May 2010. BBC Radio 4
  8. ^ Murphy, Joe (7 January 2001). "Wilson aide says Labour gave honours to donors". The Sunday Telegraph. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  9. ^ a b "Say It Ain't So, Joe", The Spectator, 22 February 1992, p.15
  10. ^ Roy Greenslade Press Gang: How Newspapers Make Profits From Propaganda, London: Pan, 2004 [2003], p.395
  11. ^ Philip Johnston and John Steele "'Inexcusable' role by Kevin Maxwell in pension raid"[dead link], Daily Telegraph, 25 June 2001. Retrieved on 15 July 2007.
  12. ^ Roland Gribben "The aides who abetted and the directors who did not delve"[dead link], Daily Telegraph, 25 June 2001. Retrieved on 15 July 2007.
  13. ^ queenmania: This repulsive article, which... - random thoughts: queen, life, and everything
  14. ^ "Dark Side of Freddie". Queencuttings. 28 November 1991. Archived from the original on 5 October 2018. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  15. ^ "Song of the Day, November 26: Lal Waterson's Reply to Joe Haines". Music and Meaning: The RBHS Jukebox. 26 November 2013. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  16. ^ Denselow, Robin (31 January 2022). "Norma Waterson obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 April 2022.

External links edit

Government offices
Preceded by
Trevor Lloyd-Hughes
Downing Street Press Secretary
1969–1970
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Robin Haydon
Downing Street Press Secretary
1974–1976
Succeeded by
Tom McCaffrey