
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This week on Media Confidential, Alan and Lionel are joined by Ailbhe Rea, political editor at the New Statesman, and George Parker, political editor of the Financial Times, for an insider’s account of the Westminster “Lobby”—the exclusive group of journalists with privileged access to Britain’s corridors of power.
With enormous influence over political narratives, the Lobby shapes how the country understands its government. But is there a danger in being too close to power? The four discuss the Lobby at its best—forensic, rigorous and brutal when necessary—and at its worst, from criticisms of herd mentality to exaggerating stories.
Ailbhe and George reveal how the system really works, from briefings with the prime minister’s spokesperson to secretive tip-offs. They also discuss the ethics of relying on anonymous sources: does the cloak of secrecy allow smears to spread? Or is it the only way to discover what politicians are really thinking?
And they make the case for why, despite its flaws, the bubble of Westminster is better off with the Lobby inside it.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Prospect Magazine4.3
1717 ratings
This week on Media Confidential, Alan and Lionel are joined by Ailbhe Rea, political editor at the New Statesman, and George Parker, political editor of the Financial Times, for an insider’s account of the Westminster “Lobby”—the exclusive group of journalists with privileged access to Britain’s corridors of power.
With enormous influence over political narratives, the Lobby shapes how the country understands its government. But is there a danger in being too close to power? The four discuss the Lobby at its best—forensic, rigorous and brutal when necessary—and at its worst, from criticisms of herd mentality to exaggerating stories.
Ailbhe and George reveal how the system really works, from briefings with the prime minister’s spokesperson to secretive tip-offs. They also discuss the ethics of relying on anonymous sources: does the cloak of secrecy allow smears to spread? Or is it the only way to discover what politicians are really thinking?
And they make the case for why, despite its flaws, the bubble of Westminster is better off with the Lobby inside it.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

422 Listeners

35 Listeners

154 Listeners

148 Listeners

72 Listeners

193 Listeners

51 Listeners

25 Listeners

107 Listeners

23 Listeners

3,842 Listeners

1,253 Listeners

844 Listeners

2,530 Listeners

44 Listeners