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Gunn on politics

Posted: 20 May 2004 | Subscribe Online


Journalists record opinion poll ratings below those of politicians. Having a foot in both camps I spend a fair amount of time trying to justify their actions.

But when individuals in either make errors of judgement for which others suffer serious disadvantage, they should be sacked or punished. Daily Mirror editor Piers Morgan failed that test.

He wanted to believe that those photographs of British soldiers mistreating Iraqi prisoners were real. As a result, he did not appear to carry out adequate checks on their authenticity or, when doubts surfaced, concede that he may have been wrong. Hubris so often deals the final hand.
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On one side of me is a box with 130 exam papers to mark, which will affect the careers of my journalism students at The City University. On the other is a draft itinerary for training African politicians in good electoral practices. As both groups hope to play their part in the future, they are a welcome distraction from the current dysfunctional relationship between our politicians and those reporting on them.

Many facts are attributed to this impasse and its impact on voter apathy. But two specific "relatives" must bear some responsibility.

The first is The Independent. This attractive newspaper may seem an unlikely culprit, but one of its distinctive features was to interweave comment and analysis into news coverage. At its birth, while political correspondent on The Times - understandably nervous of this new competitor - I and my colleagues were encouraged to follow suit.
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This initially felt self-indulgent, but it is depressingly easy to do and now infects much of the news coverage in our national newspapers.

The second is that former Daily Mirror journalist and fellow Camden resident, Alastair Campbell. When he switched his allegiance to promoting Tony Blair and New Labour, manipulation of his former colleagues was central to his role. He was, and still is, an unfailingly loyal servant to his former master.

The state of relations between politicians and the journalists is the cause of much of the frustration, anger and cynicism about both. Yet it has been caused largely by the actions of very few. A more constructive relationship between our elected politicians and those reporting on their activities is urgently required.

Sheila Gunn is a political commentator and a Conservative councillor in the London Borough of Camden.


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