"Great and congrats on Brussels, just Ofcom to go!" Hunt texted to James Murdoch, referring to a decision by EU regulators in Brussels to approve the BSkyB takeover and to a decision yet to be taken by the British regulator, Ofcom.
Hunt was trying to reassure "a furious" James Murdoch after the minister originally overseeing the takeover, Vince Cable, was removed after being secretly recorded saying he had "declared war" on Murdoch over the bid, the inquiry was told.
When News Corp complained about the government's conduct, Hunt contacted Osborne and officials in the prime minister's office to rally support for Murdoch. Hours later Hunt, who had already made it clear that he supported the bid, was put in charge of ruling on the takeover.
"Cld we chat about Murdoch Sky bid? Am seriously worried we are going to screw this up," Hunt said in one text to Osborne.
Osborne responded that he hoped Hunt "liked the solution", a reference to the decision to put Hunt in charge of the bid.
The opposition Labour Party called on Hunt to resign after evidence submitted to the Leveson inquiry revealed that a Hunt aide leaked sensitive information to News Corp after Hunt had been put in charge of the matter.
Labour have accused the Conservative/Liberal Democrat government of wanting to approve the deal to ensure they continued to receive favourable treatment from Murdoch's newspapers in Britain.
The evidence has also raised questions over Prime Minister David Cameron's judgment in putting Hunt in charge of the bid when he knew the culture secretary supported it and thought it should go ahead.
Hunt had previously written to Cameron to say that James Murdoch wanted to follow his father and create the world's first multi-platform media operator from paper to web to TV.
"I am privately concerned about this because News Corp are very litigious and we could end in the wrong place not just politically but also in terms of media policy," Hunt said in a draft memo to Cameron.
Hunt had been close to approving the deal when a simmering phone hacking scandal at Murdoch's News of the World exploded with the revelation that the tabloid had hacked into the phone of a murdered schoolgirl, sparking a public outcry and forcing News Corp to pull the bid.
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