, in a good article recounting his experience of the media and the BBC in particular while trying to put forward serious policy proposals:
I was delighted that halfway through the week Helen Boaden, a senior manager at the BBC, graciously admitted it had been wrong to run footage of me singing, from 14 years ago, as their lead-in to their first report. I am the only politician who has regularly been given eternal youth by the BBC in this way.
I do not recall, every time Neil Kinnock made a statement as EU Commissioner, the BBC running the clip of him slipping on the beach. Gordon Brown’s statements are not introduced by running the recent pictures of him picking his nose on the front bench. I look forward to fairer treatment in future.
Redwood goes on to say:
Labour has persuaded many that if you want lower tax rates you must cut public spending – and of course you would cut teachers and nurses in their parallel universe, rather than management consultants, bureaucracy and publicity.
I have gone hoarse explaining that Ireland cut tax rates on business, and lowered capital taxes, and enjoyed a large surge in revenue from the extra growth it generated. Ireland shows you can have it all – much lower tax rates, and more revenue and public spending per head. After I explain this, I am normally asked again how many teachers I want to sack to pay for the cuts!
…which is so typical of the underlying presumptions and prejudice of the BBC’s leftist public-sector mentality. Do read the rest.
P.S. Still at the Telegraph: See how they spin: see comments 7, 8 & 9 on Damian Thompson’s Telegraph blog of our story about the BBC’s Wikipedia hypocrisy. Nice try Martin! (Martin is actually a reasonable chap, avid blogger and sometime participant in the comments here at Biased BBC. Martin also wrote an interesting series of blog posts about Biased BBC earlier this year).
Thank you to an anonymous reader for the first Telegraph link.