Updated 7:10pm 24 March 2013

David Cameron pulls the plug on Leveson talks as party leaders fail to agree on press regulation

PRIME Minister David Cameron has pulled the plug on cross-party talks on a new system of regulation for the press.

Mr Cameron will now call a vote in the House of Commons on Monday on Conservative proposals for a Royal Charter to underpin the new system.

Both Labour and Liberal Democrats voiced dismay at the breakdown of discussions designed to establish cross-party consensus on the sensitive proposals in the Leveson report into phone hacking.

It is unclear whether Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg will tell his MPs to vote with Labour to defeat the Tory proposals.

In a hastily arranged press conference in 10 Downing Street, Mr Cameron announced that the cross-party talks had "concluded without agreement" after a conference call between himself, Mr Clegg and Labour leader Ed Miliband.

He said that the proposals for an independent body, established by Royal Charter, to oversee the system of press self-regulation would provide "the toughest regulation of the press that this country has ever seen".

Newspapers would refuse to sign up to a new system which is underpinned by statute, as recommended by Lord Justice Leveson and advocated by Labour, Lib Dems and the Hacked Off campaign group, he warned.

"The route I have set out is the fastest possible way to deliver the strong self-regulation body that Leveson proposed that can put in place million-pound fines, prominent apologies and get justice for victims in this country," said the Prime Minister. "The deal is there to be done, it is the fastest way to get proper justice for victims."

A senior Labour source said: "The Prime Minister's decision is very disappointing. We still hope for an agreement. We still believe there can be an agreement. We urge the Prime Minister to reflect on his actions."

A senior Lib Dem source said Mr Cameron had made the decision to pull the plug on cross-party talks "unilaterally" and the Lib Dems were now considering their next step. "We were very surprised and disappointed," said the source.

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