I'm pretty sure one of the tweets from a reporter in the court quoted the judge as saying: "the agreement should be published in full as soon as possible"...
As you say, what's stopping someone at BDO uploading a document to their website within a few hours, let alone 2 days...?
As ever with Pompey, something smelling slightly fishy... And the media, as per usual, not asking any 'difficult' questions, instead choosing to fawn over the biggest community takeover in the history of the planet...
Yep; I guess the geezer that wrote that tweet was exaggerating to illustrate a point - some see it as a tad ironic to see the free market principles that Thatcher epitomised encapsulated in the quest to get a protest song to the top of the charts. There was a rumour flying around that it's ultimately Rupert Murdoch that owns the rights to the song but I can't find anything to substantiate that.
Just a hunch, but I'm guessing Starkey does a wee bit of research into the subjects he covers rather than basing his documentaries on a few Daily Mirror headlines...
The poll (in the thread linked above) wasn't asking if sacking Nigel had been "done the right way", it was asking if people felt the underlying decision itself was correct. In other words, answering "yes" to the poll question wouldn't have compromised the almost universal view that it could have been handled better, especially from a PR perspective at the time.