Katana VentraIP

Christopher Meyer

Sir Christopher John Rome Meyer KCMG (22 February 1944 – 27 July 2022) was a British diplomat who served as the Ambassador to the United States (1997–2003), Ambassador to Germany (1997), and the chairman of the Press Complaints Commission (2003–2009).

Sir
Christopher Meyer

Elizabeth II

Tony Blair

Jonathan Haslam

Christopher John Rome Meyer

(1944-02-22)22 February 1944
Beaconsfield, England

27 July 2022(2022-07-27) (aged 78)
Megève, France

4

He was married to Catherine Laylle, founder of the charity Parents & Abducted Children Together and life peer, and an active board member of the Transatlantic Forum for Education and Diplomacy.

The Press Complaints Commission (PCC)[edit]

Meyer was appointed chairman of the Press Complaints Commission, the UK press's self-regulating body, in March 2003.[6]


During his tenure from 2003 to 2009, Meyer introduced a number of reforms to enhance the profile, independence and credibility of the Commission. These included increasing the majority of independent Commissioners, introducing independent scrutiny of the PCC's internal processes and decision-making, instituting PCC "away-days" twice a year in the cities and towns of the UK and extending the PCC's remit to online editions of newspapers, including audio-visual material. This led to a significant increase in public use of the PCC, with complaints about the press rising from 2,630 in 2002 to 4,698 by the time Meyer retired as chairman. He was also responsible for developing the PCC's pre-publication activity, including its anti-harassment service, which proved highly effective in protecting people from the unwanted attention of media scrums.[7]


Meyer's tenure coincided with the gaoling in 2007 of the News of the World reporter, Clive Goodman, and the enquiry agent, Glenn Mulcaire, for phone hacking offences under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act.[8] This prompted the resignation of Andy Coulson, the editor of the News of the World.[9]


Later, as the phone hacking scandal spread, the PCC, and Meyer himself, were criticised for not having done more to punish those responsible.[8] However, Meyer's powers as chair were relatively limited in this respect;[8] Baron Ivor Judge, the then Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, said in a 2011 lecture to the Human Rights Law Conference, "To criticise the PCC for failing to exercise powers it does not have is rather like criticising a judge who passes what appears to be a lenient sentence, when his power to pass a longer sentence is curtailed."[10]


Meyer had himself reminded the Leveson Inquiry in his witness statement, submitted on 14 September 2011, and at his appearance before the Inquiry on 31 January 2012 that phone hacking was a crime under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 and that it was not in the remit of the PCC either to apply the criminal law or to carry out investigations that rightfully belonged to the police.[11]

Honours[edit]

In 1998, he was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG).[12]


Meyer was a non-executive director of the Arbuthnot Banking Group.[13] He was also chairman of the Advisory Board of Pagefield and an honorary fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge University. He was a Liveryman of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers and a Freeman of the City of London and, on 3 April 2012, he was appointed Court Assistant honoris causa by the Company. From 2013 Meyer was a Senior Associate Fellow of the Royal United Services Institute.[14] Meyer was named in 2010 the Morehead-Cain Alumni Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of North Carolina.[15]

Writing[edit]

Meyer published his memoirs, DC Confidential, in November 2005, with extracts serialised in The Guardian and the Daily Mail. The book gave rise to considerable controversy. It was attacked by members of the Labour government (Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott called Meyer a "red-socked fop"),[16] while a group of MPs urged him to "publish and be damned".[17] Meyer gave a detailed rebuttal of his critics in written evidence submitted to the House of Commons Select Committee on Public Administration.[18] In 2005, the memoirs were included in his books of the year by Jim Hoagland, The Washington Post's commentator on foreign affairs, who described them as "thorough" and "credible".[19]


In 2009 he published a second book, Getting Our Way, a 500-year history of British diplomacy that accompanied a BBC 4 television series of the same name. He was again in the news with this book, serialised this time in The Sunday Times and The Daily Telegraph, and again openly critical of the Labour Government under which he served.[20]


In November 2013 Meyer published a third book, the Amazon Kindle single, Only Child, a personal memoir of his childhood interwoven with the story of how his father was shot down and killed in the Second World War. It includes interviews with still surviving witnesses of his father's crash and burial.[21]


Meyer was also a writer and speaker on international affairs.[1]

Broadcasting[edit]

Meyer presented several television and radio documentaries on diplomacy for the BBC, including Mortgaged to the Yanks (BBC Two/BBC Four 2006),[22] Corridors of Power,[23] How to Succeed at Summits,[24] and Lying Abroad,[25] all for BBC Radio 4 in 2006 and 2007. These were followed in 2009 by a BBC Radio 4 documentary series on the press called The Watchdog and the Feral Beast.[26] 2009 also saw him present a BBC television series Getting Our Way,[27] which chronicled episodes from British diplomatic history over the last 500 years and was later turned into a book.[28] In 2012 he fronted a six-part international documentary series for Sky Atlantic called "Networks of Power", which examined the power-brokers of Mumbai, Rome, Moscow, New York, Los Angeles and London. The Guardian found the series "immensely watchable" and described Meyer as "Paxmanesque – quizzical, authoritative, faintly mischievous".[29] He frequently appeared on news and current affairs programmes, for example, providing analysis for the BBC's coverage of President Barack Obama's state visit to Britain in May 2011.[30][31]


Meyer, when asked (in an interview with the BBC) "Which foreign government has the most influence on Washington?", unequivocally responded: "Israel." When he was then asked "And then?", he said, "Well, in the hit parade I think Israel is in a class of its own..."[32]

Christopher Meyer (2005), DC Confidential, Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ( 0-297-85114-4)

ISBN

Christopher Meyer (2009), Getting Our Way: 500 Years of Adventure and Intrigue: the Inside Story of British Diplomacy, Weidenfeld & Nicolson ( 0-297-85875-0)

ISBN

Christopher Meyer (2013). Only Child. Kindle Single eBook, Amazon.co.uk.  B00GMI3ZN8.

ASIN

The Guardian,

Sir Christopher Meyer's memoirs

JLA, speaker profile

Press Complaints Commission

on C-SPAN

Appearances