A journalist of fifty years standing offers a personal and independent assessment of the often troubled relationship between public figures and the British news media.
My aim is to try to monitor events and issues affecting the ethics of journalism and the latest developments in the rapidly-changing world of press, television, radio and the Internet.
Expect too an insight into the black arts of media manipulation. So spin-doctors, Beware!
After a lifetime’s interest in the way the news media can shape the outcome of general election campaigns, I am having to come to terms with a sea change in the way politics are reported and rethink so much of what I have written in the past.
Towns and communities across the country are starting to grasp the true extent of the troubling democratic deficit that is opening up due to the decimation of regional and weekly newspapers and a dearth of local news reporting.
Probably no other industry can match printing and publishing for the strength and intensity of the collective action which has been exercised over several centuries as workers have had to organise themselves to adjust to repeated changes in industrial and employment practices.
Try as they might Conservative propagandists and their press supporters are likely to face an uphill task in the run up to the next general election if they try to take political advantage from this winter’s industrial turmoil.
Ruthlessness is the characteristic that defines the Conservative hierarchy once they realise a party leader is a dud and must be ditched.