Culture secretary Lisa Nandy has formally intervened in the proposed £500 million acquisition of The Telegraph by the owners of the Daily Mail, citing significant concerns regarding media freedom and market competition.
The deal, struck in November by Daily Mail and General Trust (DMGT), would see the broadsheet join a stable that already includes the Daily Mail, The Metro, the i, and New Scientist. However, the government has now ordered dual investigations to determine if the merger serves the public interest.
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) will investigate whether the deal creates an unfair monopoly in the UK news market. Simultaneously, the media regulator Ofcom will assess the impact on “media plurality.” Nandy emphasised the necessity of maintaining a “sufficient plurality of views” and a diversity of individuals in control of major media outlets to ensure the UK audience is served by varied perspectives.
DMGT has maintained that The Telegraph would remain editorially independent under its ownership. Despite these assurances, the government’s intervention marks the latest hurdle for the historic newspaper, which has faced years of ownership uncertainty.
The title was put up for sale in 2023 following a debt dispute with the Barclay family, and a previous bid backed by United Arab Emirates investors was blocked due to concerns over foreign state ownership.
Ofcom and the CMA have been given a deadline of June 10 to submit their findings, at which point the government will decide whether to allow, block, or attach conditions to the sale.
