In November 2000, Northern & Shell acquired
Express Newspapers from
United News & Media for £125 million, enlarging the group to include the
Daily and
Sunday Express titles, the
Daily Star and
Daily Star Sunday (which Desmond started), and the
Irish Daily Star (owned jointly with the Irish
Independent News & Media group). In August 2024 the
Daily and
Sunday Express each sold around 120,000 to 140,000 copies per issue. After buying Express Newspapers, Desmond became embroiled in a feud with
Viscount Rothermere, publisher of the
Daily Mail, the rival to the
Daily Express, largely derived from stories relating to Rothermere's private life. In 2004, Desmond put in a £500m bid for
The Daily Telegraph and
Sunday Telegraph national newspapers and
The Spectator magazine. In April 2004, the
Daily Express reverted to supporting the
Conservatives, after a period backing Labour. On the same day, Desmond attacked
The Daily Telegraph (with which he was a joint venture partner in the West Ferry newspaper printing plant), then considering accepting a takeover by the German
Axel Springer group, and asked if they were keen on being run by
Nazis. According to Desmond, in an exchange at the meeting, all Germans are Nazis. Desmond reportedly harangued
The Daily Telegraph chief executive and associates in faux German at a business meeting and imitated
Adolf Hitler. Executives from
The Telegraph walked out of the meeting. This incident was described as a form of
institutionalised racism prevalent among newspaper proprietors. Previously, in August 2001, the
National Union of Journalists' chapel at the
Express & Star also condemned Desmond for the newspaper's "hysterical and racist" campaign against
asylum seekers; In August 2005, the former
Daily Express executive editor
Ted Young made an out-of-court settlement with Desmond's company ahead of an industrial tribunal. This related to an incident with Desmond in the newsroom in September 2004, during which Desmond was said to have hit the journalist. Desmond has repeatedly denied the claims. In 2008, Northern & Shell reported a turnover of £483.9 million.
Libel case Litigation began at the
High Court on 6 July 2009 over claims in journalist
Tom Bower's joint biography of
Conrad Black and
Barbara Amiel,
Conrad and Lady Black: Dancing on the Edge, that Desmond had made a "humiliating climbdown" over an
Express story at the end of 2002 on the state of Lord Black's finances, which it was alleged Desmond had ordered to be written. This claim of a weakening of Desmond's "super-tough" reputation as a businessman was viewed as defamation by Desmond. Bower denied libel on the grounds of the story being "substantially true". The following day, the presiding judge
The Hon. Mr Justice Eady, discharged the jury as "fundamental" evidence and legal submissions had emerged. The new jury later found in favour of Bower. A biography of Desmond, titled
Rough Trader, was written by Bower and printed in 2006 but never published.
News content In 2014 the
Financial Times referred to the Desmond-owned
Express running "apparently repetitive coverage of immigration, freak weather events and theories about the death of Diana, Princess of Wales." Commenting at the
Leveson Inquiry in January 2012, Desmond said: "There has been speculation that Diana was killed by the royal family ... The speculation has gone on and on. I don't know the answer."
The Times reported his newspapers had repeatedly published such claims. For its defamatory articles covering the
disappearance of Madeleine McCann, which numbered a hundred, the
Express paid damages of £550,000 to the toddler's parents in 2008. In his appearance at the Leveson Inquiry, Desmond said the
Express had been "scapegoated" by the
Press Complaints Commission (PCC), == Channel 5 ==