QUESTIONABLE TIME

Following last week’s full-frontal assault on Coalition minister Vince Cable, this week’s Question Time saw another Coalition minister, Grant Shapps, fall victim to a rampaging bullock, being questioned and interrupted by David Dimbleby far more than any of the other guests (even David Starkey). The figures for this will appear in the comments field below.

Well, you might say, both Mr Shapps and Dr Cable are government spokesmen, so David Dimbleby is right to challenge them more than guests from the opposition parties – except that DD didn’t challenge government ministers more than opposition party guests when Labour were in power. Quite the reverse.

Here’s a list of the guests who were interrupted most frequently by DD in relation to the length they were allowed to speak (yes, interruption coefficients!) in the months leading up to the general election. (There are a few joint first prizes):

29/4 Liam Fox (C) /Vince Cable (LD)
22/4 William Hague (C)
15/4 Nigel Farage (UKIP)
8/4 Theresa May (C)
1/4 Ken Clarke (C)
25/3 Liam Byrne (L)/Baroness Warsi (C)
18/3 Caroline Lucas (Green)/Andrew Lansley (C)
11/3 Jo Swinson (LD)
4/3 Boris Johnson (C)
25/2 Nigel Farage (UKIP)
18/2 Lynne Featherstone (LD)
11/2 Jim Allister (TUV)
4/2 Theresa May (C)
28/1 Jenny Tonge (LD)/Nigel Lawson (C)
21/1 Caroline Spelman (C)

Full details of the statistics behind this list can be found here.

By political party, that results in these totals for the award for Most Interrupted Panelist:

Conservatives – 10
Liberal Democrats – 4
UKIP – 2
TUV – 1
Greens – 1

…and for the government of the day…

Labour – 1

I wish David Dimbleby a long and happy retirement!

PAPER TRAIL

The Today programme claims to set the news agenda for Radio 4 each day. Well, it certainly tries its best, and its own agenda is often plain to hear.

The Sky News website publishes an invaluable daily gallery of the UK newspaper front pages. Which of the lead stories found there today were ignored by the Today programme’s paper reviews?

Well, besides some tabloid gossip about Posh and Becks, two leads were conspicuous by their absence from any of the programme’s three slots (at 6.12, 6.40 & 7.40).

The first was the Times‘s ‘ I won’t be rushed out of Afghanistan – Petraeus’. Above the article is a photo of laughing, open-faced Afghan girls under the banner ‘Exultant: faces of freedom in a war-torn land’. Why would the defeatist, anti-this-war Today programme choose to completely ignore this lead story?

The presenters did have time to mention the Independent and the Guardian‘s take on Bob Woodward’s new book on the Obama administration’s Afghan squabbles, with John Humphrys reading out a paean to Mr Woodward.

It’s even easier to guess why they ignored the other lead – an immigration story from the Express – ‘How migrants snatched our homes’, concerning a group of Lithuanian squatters “terrorising part of east London“.

The angle taken by the Telegraph and Mail regarding the speech on anti-social behaviour by Denis O’Connor, the Chief Inspector of Constabulary – ‘Police give up the fight as yobs take over’ and ‘Police: We have let yobs rule streets’ – was mentioned by the presenters, but how did the Today website, which also made it its lead story, choose to angle the subject?: “The Chief Inspector of Constabulary says that police efforts to tackle anti-social behaviour in England and Wales must not suffer because of spending cuts.” Ah yes, budget cuts!

“Our job is to ensure we remain absolutely impartial and present the facts to our audiences – without following any agendas,” said Helen Boaden, director of BBC news. Really?

A WEEK WITH MARTHA (AND BRIAN)

And if you thought Newsnight was bad…

This week’s World at One was another Labour-heavy zone.

The list of UK politicians interviewed across all five programmes runs as follows:

Labour – Sally Keeble (2.5 minutes)
Andy Burnham, (6 minutes)
David Miliband (8.5 minutes)
Michael Meacher (1 minute)
Ed Balls (4.5 minutes)

Conservative – Damian Green (3 minutes)

Liberal Democrat – No-one

(No mention of anyone declining to be interviewed either!)

There were also interviews with a co-founder of Labour’s sister party, the SDLP; the director general of the Equality and Human Rights Commission; a left-leaning Irish economist; a Democrat mayor; and a trades unionist. Other than Mr Green, no right-wingers were interviewed.

Indefensible, surely?

NURSE! NURSE!

The BBC News Channel’s coverage of the government’s decision to scrap NHS Direct has descended into self-parody.

The story broke this afternoon. BBC political correspondent Arif Ansari initially reported the story fairly, presenting pros and cons, but the BBC News Channel is nothing if not biased so…

16.03 Frank Dobson, Labour – strongly attacked the move
16.06 Lord John Prescott, Labour -strongly attacked the move
16.33 Nick Chapman, chief executive of NHS Direct – spoiled the narrative by being strongly supportive of the move. Presenter Carole Walker sounded a bit taken aback by this and, having realised that he wasn’t the aggrieved quangocrat she was expecting, soon started interrupting, pushing the Prescott points. She thanked him at the end very sourly. Ha!
17.01 Reprise of part of the Chapman interview.
17.11 Reprise of part of the Prescott interview
18.03 Andy Burnham, Labour – strongly criticised the move
19.02 Partial reprise of Burnham attack (following report featuring Mr Chapman and Lord Prescott)
20.02 Partial reprise of Burnham attack
21.03 Partial reprise of Burnham attack
21.04 Gail Adams, UNISON – strongly attacked the move (“the same service but on the cheap”)

Worst BBC interviewer so far? Chris Rogers. Here are his questions to fellow beeboid Ben Wright:

– “Cameron in the early days of the last election said ‘I’ll cut the deficit not the NHS’. It was on their campaign posters. How are they justifying this?” (“Cameron”? Doesn’t he mean “David Cameron”, “Mr Cameron” or “the prime minister”?)

– “A lot of people have been contacting BBC News today saying they’ve used the NHS Direct service. They’re now very concerned at the talk of 60 hours of training for the staff, no real qualified GPs and nurses are going to be on call. Are the government saying that this new service, 111, will be safe?” Of course, they’re “concerned”. Labour and the BBC had been scaring them all evening!

“Of course the pressure is on though. John Prescott is..I think it’s 2,500 signatures (wow!!) for his petition now..if it gets to a 100,000 – which it could easily do as momentum builds (you can hope!) – this could be an embarrassment for the government?”

So, besides the head of NHS Direct, that’s three Labour politicians, a trades unionist and some biased questioning. That’s BBC impartiality for you!

‘NEWSNIGHT’ – A LABOUR-SAVING DEVICE?

If you were thinking that you seem to have seen a lot of Labour MPs on Newsnight recently, well you have.

Here is a list of all the UK politicians who have appeared on Newsnight this month, whether as interviewees or as ‘talking heads’ in reports. (Duplicated names mean appearances in more than one edition!):

Conservatives: Cllr Gavin Elsey (who opposes the government’s immigation cap!), Damian Green, Mark Hoban, Nadine Dorries, Stephen Dorrell, David Willetts, Chris Grayling, John Redwood, Oliver Heald, Peter Lilley, Michael Portillo, Nick Hurd, Bob Stewart
****Total = 13

Lib Democrats: Simon Hughes, Chris Huhne, Simon Hughes, Lord Taylor
****Total = 4

Labour: Keith Vaz, Ed Balls, Tom Harris, Andy Burnham, Stephen Pound, Ed Balls, David Miliband, Diane Abbott, John Prescott, Tessa Jowell, Lord Myners, John McFall, Lord Dubbs, Caroline Flint, Shahid Malik, Tom Harris, Khalid Mahmood, Chuka Umunna, John Mann
****Total 19

SDLP (Labour’s sister party): Delores Kelly
****Total = 1

(I didn’t include ex-minister Lord West, as he’s not supposed to be a Labour party man – though he did attack the new government on the programme.)

So, unlike when Labour were in power and the government dominated the airwaves, the main opposition now gets more invites to speak on Newsnight than both of the government parties combined.

That seems a bit odd, doesn’t it Mr Hunt?

It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World

Just when you think the world can’t get any madder, or crueller…

Saudi man ‘faces spine-op punishment’

A Saudi judge is reported to have asked hospitals if it is possible to cut the spinal cord of the man, found guilty of paralysing another man in a fight.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-11045848

We’ve been waiting days now for the BBC to report this story – another instance of commenters here and elsewhere on the internet breaking stories long before the BBC!

NotaSheep also spotted the low-key, late-on-parade BBC article, which for the most part is a straightforward factual account. He draws our attention though to the “incredible” final paragraph :

‘Correspondents say the case highlights attempts by Saudi Arabia to balance
religious traditions with a push to modernise the country.’
http://notasheepmaybeagoat.blogspot.com/2010/08/bbc-and-how-they-report-on-hated-israel.html

I bet you never thought of it that way! I suspect you were thinking something more like ‘How barbaric!’ or ‘How disgusting!’

What goes on in the minds of BBC ‘correspondents’?

A DAY IN THE LIFE

As an experiment, I thought I’d pick a single story from yesterday’s news and follow it throughout the course of the day on the BBC News Channel. I thought I’d choose whatever was the BBC’s ‘Cuts Story of the Day’. Yesterday it was the government’s proposal in a consultation paper to cut the benefits of any drug addict who refuses treatment. A sensible-sounding idea you might think. Well, I’m not so sure now. Why? Because I watched every interview on the subject on the News Channel between 7.00am and 11.00pm and, with just one exception, they all said it was a big mistake.

Breakfast set the agenda:

“Drug addicts on benefits must seek treatment or they could have their
welfare taken away. That’s the hard line being considered by ministers trying to
cut government spending. A similar policy was dropped by the previous Labour
government because of fears that addicts could be driven to crime to support
their habit.”


In that single statement, there’s a subjective judgement that this is a “hard-line” policy, as well as a presumption that the reason for any such policy is purely “to cut government spending” – not also to help tackle a major social ill.

First to be interviewed was Martin Barnes of the charity DrugsScope. He was critical of the proposal. Clearly a decent chap, he resisted the bait in Kate Silverton‘s loaded question: “Do you think this is about dealing with drug addiction or saving money?” He said it was the former. Oh well, a beeboid can but try!!

As the News Channel-proper began rolling at 8.30 Tim Willcox interviewed…Martin Barnes of DrugsScope, who made the same criticisms again. To his credit, Tim did put several good questions to him (unlike Kate).

The same interview was reprised in full at 9.45.

So nothing but criticism of the government’s ‘hard-line’ proposal so far.

At 11.45 Richard Tilt, from “the independent Social Security Advisory Committee” was interviewed. He too was also critical of the government. He went on to regret its decision not to bring up the issue of the de-criminalisation of drugs.

At 12.15 the criticism was ratcheted up, with Kirsty Douse, a young woman from the drugs agency Release, being highly critical of the proposal.

At 12.35 the one and only supporter of the proposal appeared – the Labour MP and former home office minister Alan Campbell (who I’d never heard of). Mr Campbell came across very well, refusing to play party politics. The nearest he came was to express, in passing, a hope that the government was doing it for the right reasons. This comment took up about 5 seconds in a 4 minute interview.

The interview with Mr Campbell was reprised at 1.40, though the most supportive first minute was cut! Worse, beeboid Julian Worricker introduced the truncated clip like this: “Well, earlier I spoke to Alan Campbell…and he told me the scheme would only be successful if it was done for the right reasons”. Trust the BBC to pluck out of context a passing comment! Pure narrative-spinning!

The report by beebette Jude Kelly on the One O’clock News featured a reprise of some of the earlier criticisms. In a sop to impartiality it featured a tiny excerpt from an interview with Tory minister James Brokenshire. This interview was never broadcast on the News Channel & must have been done just for the One O’clock News. Why was the full interview never broadcast on the News Channel (or anywhere else?). What else did Mr Brokenshire say? We’ll never know.

The criticism was ratcheted up even more at 2.10 as Mark Linnell from the drugs charity Lifeline denounced the government’s proposal as “a terrible idea” and a “policy written on the back of a fag packet” (a phrase beloved of Labour, coincidentally).

At 3.10, Howard Garrick, a recovering addict, and Savvas Panas (Howard’s helper) from the Pillion Trust appeared. Howard said that if his benefits had been cut he’d have resorted to crime to get the money to feed his habit. Mr Panas was very critical of the government’s proposal too, saying “this new policy is going to push those people further underground”.

On the Six O’Clock News (seen by millions. Shame on them when The Simpsons is on Channel 4!!), Jude Kelly‘s report dropped Mr Brokenshire and any pretence of impartiality. Her report was prefaced by this: “Charities have warned that addicts will increasingly turn to crime and prostitution to feed their habit without proper support.” Jude’s report featured Barry Woodward, a former drug addict & dealer, who said the government’s proposal wouldn’t work. She went on, “Some who are familiar with the drugs world condemn what they call the blunt stick approach of benefits cuts”. For ‘proof’ she turned to Ettan, a former addict, who condemned the proposal, saying it will lead to more homelessness & crime. No-one else was featured, no defence given.

The only new interviewee to appear on the News channel after that came at 8.15, and it was someone from the organisation I was expecting to appear all along – Steve Rolles of the pro-legalisation campaign group Transform. He, in conversation with the very fragrant Sangita Myska, also strongly attacked the government’s proposal. (Sangita didn’t fail to mention “swingeing cuts“).

There are two different conclusions a News Channel watcher might draw from this. On the one hand it could be the case that only politicians support this proposal. Everyone else, including all drugs charities, thinks its a very bad idea. So it is a very bad idea. Or you might instead suspect that the BBC has deliberately ignored all other supporters of the proposal in order to pump out nothing but anti-government propaganda all day long and that there might be a valid case for doing as the government proposes after all, even though we haven’t heard it on the BBC. (I’ll leave Martin to suggest another possible reason why the BBC might be resistant to the idea of a cutting the benefits of drug addicts!!)

INTERVIEWING WITHOUT DUE CARE AND ATTENTION

Laura Kuennsberg didn’t exactly cover herself in glory on Wednesday’s Newsnight, when she repeatedly interrupted Republican Brad Blakeman over the issue of the Islamic centre at Ground Zero, while not interrupting Mosque-supporter Nihad Awad of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. (She even called the latter ‘Nihad’).

Last night’s performance was if anything even worse.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/newsnight (beginning about nine minutes in).

After another completely one-sided report from Liz MacKean, which propagandized for keeping speed cameras and against government budget cuts, Laura interviewed speed camera enthusiast George Monbiot and speed camera naysayer Claire Armstrong of Safe Speed.

Mrs Armstrong faced constant interruptions from Monbiot. Not only did Laura Kuennsburg not even try to control Monbiot’s aggressive behaviour, she joined him in interrupting Mrs Armstrong. George Monbiot was merely asked a couple of half-hearted questions and then allowed to get on with it. Claire Armstrong, however, was challenged with several tough questions, all from the same pro-speed camera position advanced by Liz MacKean’s report and by George Monbiot:

“Claire Armstrong, you might be pleased that cameras are disappearing, but how can you be when the police say, quite clearly, this will result in more people being hurt and possibly killed?”

“Well Claire, isn’t it the case actually that the statistics overwhelmingly do show a change? Not just the Department of Transport. There are countless studies, one from UCL that showed a 67% reduction in speeding, another from a different place showing a 7o% reduction in speeding, one from the University of Liverpool…I mean, why continue with the small amount of statistics that appear to contradict the lion’s share?”

“Well Claire, where has that myth about them making money come from then, because if that was the case in these cash-strapped times, surely the government should be putting speed cameras across the land?”

“What do you say to women like that mother in the film who wanted a speed camera on her road? She believes in her heart that it could have saved lives if it was on her road.”

“Claire Armstrong, why is it socially acceptable to speed? Decades ago it was socially acceptable to drink and then drive and then to not wear a seat-belt. But why do you believe it’s socially acceptable to speed?” (Mrs Armstrong doesn’t, of course, believe any such thing).

It should be socially unacceptable for BBC interviewers and BBC programmes to take sides on controversial political issues.

DAILY SKEW

Following on from David’s post Defeated in Iraq…

Whatever your own view of the Iraq War, the BBC constantly campaigned against it. The BBC also loves Obama. So how to report the withdrawal of US combat troops from Iraq?

Clare Spencer, the left-winger who writes most of the Daily View pieces for the BBC website’s See Also column, is back from her holiday today. Her first post is Daily View: US troops leaving Iraq.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/seealso/2010/08/daily_view_us_troops_leaving_i.html

If you were a biased right-wing reporter, who would most want to ignore on this issue? Robert Fisk of the Independent probably. If you were a biased left-wing reporter, who would you go to first? Robert Fisk of the Independent probably. Clare Spencer goes first to Robert Fisk, quoting some of his usual anti-Western, anti-(this-)war bile.

After Fisk comes Steve Benen, a JournOLista at the Washington Monthly (Clare is fond of quoting JournOListas), who ‘balances’ Fisk by taking “some satisfaction” in this milestone being achieved. Bad war yes, but well done Obama!

After the left-wing Fisk and the left-wing Benen comes left-wing blogger Juan Cole of Informed Comment who synthesizes the two views to get the perfect BBC opinion:

What Obama has done is stay true to US commitment to get combat units out by September 1. That should reassure Iraqis – and Arabs and Muslims in general – about US intentions. It is a symbol of a turnaround in US policy, a repudiation of the Bush administration doctrine of preemptive war.

Fourth comes Roula Khalaf of the Financial Times who “argues…that the Iraqis have little to celebrate about the US withdrawal”. (This could be read as a criticism of Obama’s move, but isn’t.)

An article in Foreign Policy by John Negroponte, ex-ambassador to Iraq, is quoted next. His quote offers advice for the future, so it doesn’t really counteract the one-sided appraisal of the war of the article so far.

Clare then quotes the Daily Mail. That’s odd. But when you read the quote you find that the Mail article attacks Bush and Blair and calls the war “shameful, without any winners” – which is exactly what beeboids wants to hear!

The one bit (out of seven) that genuinely does provide balance comes from the Daily Mirror, where “the director of the Iraqi Association, a charity for Iraqi refugees in Britain Jabbar Hasan argues “that the Iraq war was worth it”.

However, it’s back to the far-Left anti-war campaigner Rose Gentle (who lost her son in the war and then joined Galloway’s Respect Party) to finish the article in the same Fiskian spirit as it began:

Life in Iraq hasn’t got any better. It’s got worse. Nothing has been achieved there which is very disappointing. There is still no stability despite thousands of innocent Iraqis being killed during the war.”