
UK MAIL ON SUNDAY CODE
Given these repeated breaches of the Editors’ Code of Practice over an extended period, the question now is whether IPSO will now undertake a standards investigation into ‘The Mail on Sunday’. The article implied this was evidence for a global warming ‘pause’ - an argument of which climate science deniers are fond, no matter how many times scientists point out its failings.

Only a month ago DeSmog UK covered the latest David Rose controversy after he wrote that “the world average temperature in January 2017 was about the same as January 1998”. In the past twelve months, five of Mr Rose’s articles have been shown to be false, with IPSO adjudications published on 6 August, 17 September and 24 September 2017. The incident highlights the weakness of newspaper regulation in the face of repeated and deliberate breaches. The code states: “A significant inaccuracy, misleading statement or distortion must be corrected, promptly and with due prominence, and - where appropriate - an apology published”. The Mail on Sunday published a correction that admitted the paper had been forced to admit it broke the Editors’ Code of Practice. The newspaper wrongly stated that the study was based on “faulty data” and had “duped world leaders”. Yesterday the newspaper was forced to publish an apology about a story from over a year ago that repeated false claims about a study by American scientists suggesting that the so-called ‘hiatus’ in global warming never occurred. Football Mail on Sunday - reviews the Premier League, the Championship and the Football League games from Saturday as well as most international games.The Mail on Sunday newspaper has again been forced to correct the record after continuing to publish misinformation about climate change by its reporter David Rose.It features a variety of sports and sometimes has an emphasis on alternative sports such as darts and snooker. Sportsmail - on the back pages of the Mail.Mail on Sunday 2 - this includes review, including articles on the arts, books and culture.It also has a particular stance towards gadgets, and was criticised for brand favouritism. The main features are columns that well-known people write, such as Piers Morgan.
UK MAIL ON SUNDAY TV

Financial Mail on Sunday - now incorporated into the main section of the paper, it includes the award winning Financial Mail Enterprise, focusing on small business.The editor who followed him was Jonathan Holborow and the current editor is Peter Wright. Its circulation grew from around 1 million to almost 2 million during his time in charge. The newspaper's reputation developed thanks to Stewart Steven. Today (2008)the circulation is around 2.3 million, an increase of more than 1.5 million. The third was a magazine called You magazine.The second was a colour comic supplement (something new to the British Sunday newspaper market).The first was a sponsored partwork the first of which was a cookery book.The circulation then increased to 840,000. In the first three and a half months, Sir David managed to stop the fall in sales. He helped redesign and re-launch The Mail on Sunday. Lord Rothermere then brought in the Daily Mail's editor David English (later Sir David). After six weeks, sales were only around 700,000 copies.

But the launch of The Mail on Sunday was not a success. Initially DMGT wanted to sell 1.25 million copies a week. The Daily Mail and General Trust(DMGT)came up with some tough targets for the paper to reach. The first story ever printed on the front page was the RAF's bombing of Port Stanley airport in the Falklands. The Mail on Sunday was first launched on, to go with the Daily Mail. They are both owned by Associated Newspapers, but the editorial staff are completely separate.

The Daily Mail was launched nearly a century before(1896) and is The Mail on Sunday's sister paper. It sells the second biggest amount of Sunday newspapers in Britain after The News of the World. It was first published in 1982 by Lord Northcliffe. Over six million people read it every week. The Mail on Sunday is a British newspaper. Northcliffe House, 2 Derry Street, Kensington, London, U.K.
