MPs on the culture committee came to publish a report; Tom Watson came to bury Rupert Murdoch.
The Sun King was evidently in Watson's sights before the report was written. He believed, finally, that he had the right to take dead aim.
"More than any individual alive, he is to blame, morally the deeds are his; he paid the piper and called the tune," said Watson yesterday, at an ill-tempered press conference at which MPs on the select committee clashed about their conclusions.
"It is his company, his culture, his people, his business, his failures, his crimes, the price of profits and power."
Allied to his certainty of Murdoch's guilt, Watson said that he was disappointed with some sitting close to him who "didn't feel inclined or confident" to hold the most powerful to account. Rupert Murdoch was not fit to run an international company, and Watson knew which company he had in mind, adding "like BSkyB".