Wednesday 24 March 2010

Bias In The Media...Again


A second vicious attack on Nigel Farage and UKIP appeared recently, this time in The Times. This article is, if anything, even worse than that published in The Telegraph last week. Rather than make another rant on the subject, I shall point to this post from Eursoc, which I think sums it up nicely.
It is interesting to note however that the writers of both of these articles, Tanya Gold for The Telegraph and Camilla Long for The Times, both won awards at The British Press Awards last night. Apparently this sort of journalism is the model that others should be following.

Saturday 20 March 2010

Bias In The Media


I’d only been awake a few minutes this morning before being spurred into writing another post. The reason? Opening a newspaper. The article in question that drove me to such anger was a piece in The Telegraph covering the recent UKIP conference.
Now I have no objection to the reviewer (Tanya Gold) taking issue with their policies, nor do I mind it being a subjective piece. My issue with it is that the piece has no ambition to give an outline of the party’s conference; instead it is designed to make UKIP seem as foolish as possible. Every quote is twisted and turned and everyone who has been interviewed is turned into a figure of ridicule. Within the first couple of paragraphs we have “They are here – the Little England Euro-sceptics, brushing the dust from their eyes”, “ragtag army of bearded men and ancient ladies” and “UKIP supporters are the worst dressers in British politics”. Honestly, can you imagine the same tact being used for other parties? Perhaps she would describe Labour as ‘self-interested liars, filling out their expenses forms’ or the Conservatives as ‘insubstantial career politicians, desperately trying to get their greedy mitts on power’.
This comes literally weeks after Nigel Farage, UKIPs former leader and most prominent member, was fined €3000 for correctly pointing out that Herman Van Rompuy (EU President for those who have never heard of him) has all “the charisma of a damp rag” and “the appearance of a low grade bank clerk”. This was enough for politicians to call for the democratically elected MEP to be suspended from the European Parliament, though similar language against this party seems more than acceptable – expected even. The hypocrisy astounds me.
But back to the article – surely this article is attacking a party many of The Telegraph’s readers agree with. After all it is a conservative newspaper, and The Conservatives have been bleeding votes to UKIP since ‘Cast-Iron Dave’ (as he is regularly called in the newspaper’s own comments) reneged on his Lisbon Treaty Referendum promise. Surely then none of the paper’s journalists despise UKIP to such an extent that they’d write such a scathing article. Well presumably that is why the editors brought in Tanya Gold to write the article, a lady famed for her “comic observational articles” in The Guardian, The Independent and The Daily Mail: the three papers that a typical reader of The Telegraph would disagree with most strongly.
As I conclude this post though I am heartened by the comments below the article. Despite the blatant attempt to win wavering Tories back into the fold, this article seems to have, if anything, pushed them into the arms of UKIP. At this moment all but 1 commenter has pledged their vote to UKIP. I will end with two of my favourite quotes from these comments:

“Your paper may well mock and denigrate UKIP in the run-up to the General Election, but it will be UKIP that has the last laugh when Cameron and his cronies fail to collect the keys to Number 10” (Christopher Dean)


“They aren't 'slick', and they don't have powerful spin doctors to get the Party 'message' across. In my book that is a definite plus … Pathetic” (Robbydot)

Friday 19 March 2010

BA Cabin Crew To Strike


The planned strike by BA cabin crew staff will go ahead after talks between BA and Unite collapsed today.  This comes after a failed attempted strike over Christmas, which was deemed illegal by a High Court ruling in December, and a pledge from Unite that any strike action would not occur over Easter.
I can’t help but wonder what was going through the minds of those crew members who voted for strike action. It seems completely barmy to me. Last month BA announced a pre-tax loss of £50m, which although an improvement on the £122m loss the year before, is still a long way from being profitable. The cost cutting measures announced by BA which have sparked this row were designed to try and cut this deficit and bring the company back to profitability. Measures the cabin crew have taken particular issue with include cutting cabin crew from 15 to 14 on long-haul flights and a two year pay freeze, as well as proposed measures for new recruits which include dispensing with seniority, promotion on merit and pay equal to the market standard plus 10%.
Forgive me for my lack of sympathy with the crew but these measures seem more than fair, generous even, given the recent recession and the resulting effect it has had on the aviation industry. Bear in mind that a crew of 14 is still above most other airlines and a fair way above the legal minimum of 12 (for a Boeing 747). Had BA wanted to save more they could have cut the crew further; they should be relieved that BA has only knocked 1 member from each flight, not incensed by it.  BA also pays higher salaries than the market average and a pay freeze while the airline recovers seems reasonable.
As for the measures yet to come into effect, the proposed scrapping of the Seniority System is long overdue. Under this system the longer standing cabin crew get first dibs on the flights they want to work on, often earning more than some pilots into the bargain, and causing newer staff to take the unwanted earlier flights to less desirable locations. As for promotion on merit, I’m amazed this has not already been adopted and even more shocked that the cabin crew oppose it.  In what other job would less able workers be promoted above brighter or harder working individuals, simply because they have been there longer? It’s madness and surely increases complacency among the crew; competition is healthy and would help to improve customer service for the airline’s passengers.
This strike will serve only to reverse the company’s partial recovery causing heavier losses, in both the punitive sense and in terms of passengers. And what will the strike achieve? BA has used the time since the ruling on the first planned strikes to retrain hundreds of ground crew and will put the biggest contingency plan in its troubled history into effect over Easter. The airline has pledged to keep 65% of its customers flying, utilising a fleet of chartered jets and a 1,000 strong volunteer cabin crew. The cost of this plan is part of the reason why BA put a weaker option on the table to that offered previously.
Mr Woodley, Unite’s General Secretary, is now demanding that offer back after he failed to get a better deal. But it’s too late: had Unite been more reasonable and accepted that offer earlier, BA would not be struck with the departure of many customers, and increasing losses. Mr Walsh, Chief executive of BA, has said that the threat of strike action has cost the airline £27m and 103,000 passengers. What happens if this strike causes such an exodus of passengers that the national carrier has to call in the administrators? How the cabin crew will rue their greedy demands when they are jobless and broke themselves. Of course Tony Woodley and his chums at Unite won’t be too upset by this as they’ll be keeping their jobs and raking in their six-figure salaries regardless of the outcome of this dispute.
And what of the Government’s efforts to resolve the issue? Well Cameron has branded them “feeble” and added “It is back to the 1970s”, saying that Labour is a "wholly owned subsidiary of the union ... They pick the candidates, they choose the policies, they elect the leader and they have special access to Downing Street”. Cameron is spot on here - of course the same can be said for the Tories.  The difference is that it is donors like Lord Ashcroft controlling the party and its politics rather than the unions. As for Cameron’s quip about the 1970s, continuing his comparison he is surely implying that he is to Thatcher, as Brown is to Callaghan. Back then the unions had brought the country to its knees, and it was Thatcher who crushed their grip on the country to such an extent that they have only recently began to flex their muscles again. I cannot imagine the current Conservative party being anything like as successful in their dealings with the unions, not while Cameron’s in the cockpit.

Thursday 18 March 2010

First Post


Right, I’ve had it. I’m fed up of the rubbish I keep reading in the press; Fed up of the incredible bias on the BBC; Fed up of our useless politicians. No-one seems to represent the views of the general public any more. So I’ve decided to start my own blog to express my own views and hopefully stimulate some discussion on some of the key issues our politicians shy away from. This is something I have been considering doing for a while, primarily through frustration at the ever diminishing differences between the three ‘Main Parties’ whose policy boundaries are now so blurred that the only choice between them at the forthcoming election is which of the leaders is going to cause the least damage to this country.
The thing that has angered me into finally putting pen to paper though (or fingers to keyboard) is not just the complete lack of understanding of the public mood from the main parties but from the mainstream media as well. I can now no longer read a newspaper without being angered by the fact that not a single one cares about this merging of the political parties. On the one hand you have The Guardian moaning about the Conservatives and arguing the case for Labour and on the other you have The Telegraph continually stressing how the country cannot survive five more years of Brown and Labour. None seem to realise that Labour, the Conservatives and the Lib Dems are one and the same. None understand the true reasons behind the public hatred of politicians, who bleat on about such things as the Expenses Scandal as the reason for their downfall.
Voter turnout has been decreasing since a relative high of 77.7% at the 1992 General Election to a low of 59.4% in the 2001 election. A recent Ipsos/Mori poll predicted that turnout for the upcoming election could be as low as 53%. This trend shows that public apathy to politics is no new phenomenon, and while it has been exacerbated by the recent scandals, had already been on the increase. The political ‘Elite’ fail to see the real reasons the public are disillusioned with politicians. Why bother turning out to vote when every candidate is proposing the same thing?
In my despair at the lack of comment on this subject I have started this blog. I will use it to comment on what I believe to be the important issues of the day and endeavour to give a refreshingly different take than that offered by the mainstream media. I encourage criticism and debate, something that our current crop of politicians seem keen to stifle!