Ed Miliband (L) exchanged letters with Lord Rothermere over the Mail newspapers' coverage of his family
Newspaper owner Lord Rothermere must take a "long, hard look" at the "culture and practices" of his Mail titles, Ed Miliband has said.
The proprietor has apologised to Mr Miliband for a Mail on Sunday reporter intruding on a family memorial service.
Labour said this was "an important step" but that he had failed to address the Daily Mail's articles about the party leader's late father, Ralph.
Mr Miliband said he wanted to know "how these practices are allowed to happen".
Last weekend, a Daily Mail article labelled Ralph Miliband, a Marxist academic who died in 1994, "the man who hated Britain".
'Line crossed'
That prompted Mr Miliband to complain about his father being "smeared", and, although the newspaper offered him a right of reply, it has continued to defend its coverage.
In a separate incident on Thursday, the Mail on Sunday suspended two of its journalists after it emerged the paper had gate-crashed a service for the Labour leader's uncle, at which they pressed the family for reaction to the original Daily Mail article.
"Sending a reporter to my late uncle's memorial crosses a line of common decency," Mr Miliband wrote to Lord Rothermere.
"I believe it a symptom of the culture and practices of both the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday."
Mail on Sunday editor Geordie Greig said the reporter had been sent without his knowledge and an investigation was being held into "a decision which was wrong".
Both he and Lord Rothermere apologised "unreservedly", with the peer also writing to Mr Miliband.
In response to the letter, a Labour spokesman said: "Lord Rothermere has repeated the apology for the behaviour of the Mail on Sunday. This is an important step.
"However, he says he does not believe it reflected the culture and practices of the Mail or Mail on Sunday, and also he does not address the treatment of Ed Miliband's dad over the last few days.
"We continue to believe these issues need addressing and until they do so, many people will continue to believe that these newspapers are not upholding the values and decency of the British people."
In an interview with debating blog LabourList, Mr Miliband added: "It's time [Lord Rothermere] took a long, hard look at the way his papers are run...
"I want to know how these practices are allowed to happen. Not on the basis of being 'one rogue reporter' or 'one rogue editor' but what is it about the culture and practice of the organisation that makes these kind of things acceptable?
"Because the decisions made by an individual in an organisation are shaped by the culture and practice of an organisation."
Mr Miliband said he had felt "apprehension" before reacting to the papers' coverage of his family.
"It's the first time this has happened to me in this way," he said.
"But many other people have been affected by this sort of practice and I'm serious about what I said in my letter to Lord Rothermere - he's got to look into the culture and practice of the Mail and the Mail on Sunday."
Neither Labour nor Associated Newspapers - the Mail titles' parent company - have released the text of Lord Rothermere's response to Mr Miliband.
'Useful idiot'
On Thursday's Question Time on BBC One, the Daily Mail's political sketch writer Quentin Letts defended its original reporting of the views of Ralph Miliband, a Jewish refugee who fled Belgium aged 16 to escape the Nazis and who served in the Royal Navy during WWII.
Mr Letts described the socialist academic as a "useful idiot" for "people that were promoting Marxism" during the Cold War.
Mr Letts added that Ralph Miliband had been "furious that we won the Falklands War. He wanted us to lose the Falklands War.
"Is that the behaviour of a man who loves his country? I'm not sure it is."
However, shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper, praising Ralph Miliband's military record, told the programme: "People who haven't served their country and fought for their country should really think before deciding that they have a monopoly on determining British values."
Meanwhile Ralph Miliband's biographer, Michael Newman, said the late academic "wanted a different kind of Britain" but "wasn't against Britain".
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