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World Business Report

get recommendations before deciding what to do. —— if the government had acted pre—emptively. would it have been preferable for that process to happen faster? of course it would because this has been going on for far too long, i acknowledged that at the beginning, this has been decades people have been waiting. in terms of the process i did not put in train which is in train and i think is reasonable, i think it is right to the inquiry finishes its work, provides those independent recommendations which it has done and is doing, and then the government acts as quickly as possible to make decisions and bring the appropriate recognition and redress to people. mar; the appropriate recognition and redress to people.— the appropriate recognition and redress to people. may i 'ust ask, is our redress to people. may i 'ust ask, is your arnsewfi redress to people. may i 'ust ask, is your answer then _ redress to people. may i 'ust ask, is your answer then to h redress to people. may ijust ask, is your answer then to the - redress to people. may ijust ask, l is your answer then to the question that he would have wished it had been quicker? {lit that he would have wished it had been quicker?— been quicker? of course i wish it would have _ been quicker? of course i wish it would have been _ been quicker? of course i wish it would have been quicker, - been quicker? of course i wish it would have been quicker, i- been quicker? of course i wish it would have been quicker, i thinkj would have been quicker, i think that seems self—evident. this has been going on for decades. i do not think anyone would sit there and say

Government , Course , Recommendations , Process , Pre-emptively , Work , Inquiry , People , Terms , Train , Answer , Ust-ask

Politics Live

two people. the first one is," it is about using the private sector more, something we should be very comfortable with." the second quote is, "people go as nhs patients to the private sector and we could do more of it." can i ask the japanese prime minister which quote is from the prime minister and which is from the prime minister and which is from the leader of the opposition? mr speaker, may ijust begin by saying generally how sorry i was to hear that the honourable lady will be standing down at the next election. she and ijoined these house at the same time. and i know she has contributed much to her party and to this place. i am sure she will wish tojoin me in celebrating his majesty king charles receiving the scottish regalia pretty much as we speak. there is always time for a dumbass keen conversion, mr speaker.

People , One , Something , Sector , Quote , National-health-service , Patients , More , Two , Prime-minister , Speaker , Mr

Verified Live

unnecessary, unsafe and unfair. it must stop. we have a long way still to go and we are not complacent. but unlike the benches opposite, we have a plan. we are delivering that plan and we will not rest until we stop the boats. to speaker, may ijust say before i finish, i want to offer my apology to the opposition for the late delivery of this statement? and with that, i commend this statement to the house. with that, i commend this statement to the house-— to the house. secretary of state, yvette c00per- — to the house. secretary of state, yvette cooper. thank _ to the house. secretary of state, yvette cooper. thank you, - to the house. secretary of state, yvette cooper. thank you, mr . yvette cooper. thank you, mr speaker. _ yvette cooper. thank you, mr speaker. for _ yvette cooper. thank you, mr speaker, for your— yvette cooper. thank you, mr speaker, for your response i yvette cooper. thank you, mr. speaker, for your response and yvette cooper. thank you, mr - speaker, for your response and thank you to the home secretary for her apology. mr speaker, the prime minister flew apology. mr speaker, the prime ministerflew to apology. mr speaker, the prime minister flew to dover today to congratulate himself and to tell us that his plan is working. even though the asylum backlog he promised to clear is at a record high, decisions are down, caseworkers have dropped, hotel uses up, returns are down, only 1% of last year's small boat cases have

Way , Plan , Benches , Boats , Statement , Apology , Speaker , Opposition , Delivery , May-ijust , Home-secretary , Mr

The Media Show

public sector, because the serious point is that they increasingly start from the point of view of how do i get the least possible information into the hands of the public, and that is not theirjob. we are in a democracy after all. yourjob is to provide the most possible information, they are paid for the public, by you and me, because journalists are people too, to do exactly that, to foster open and demographic local government and services. i think we need a pretty fundamental reset to get back to that. what sort of techniques do they use to try to close down information? the first thing is, they will not answer the phone or answer an e—mail. because why would they? because they are leveraging their power as a monopoly. they have a monopoly on being your local council. if they don't answer your e—mail or the phone, you often can't run that story because you need a response from them. you can't go to another council to answer that question. so they can kill the storyjust by not picking up the phone or answering an e—mail.

All , Public , Democracy , Information , Point , Point-of-view , Public-sector , Hands , People , Government , Journalists , You-and-me

The Media Show

who are promoting the big lie, and those who really don't, but it has become massively mainstream. if you look at the hearings that are currently going on, on capitol hill into what happened around the january 6, 2021 storming of the us capitol, what we see is that the american electorate is completely bifurcated by this conspiracy theory which really has qanon as a huge element. and the question of what happened in the 2020 election has essentially ceased to be one that is empirically answerable in american politics. it has become an entirely political question, and no facts seem capable of dissuading people who believe this conspiracy theory of the falseness of it. irene, this is a vast disinformation campaign, if you like. what is it about it that has meant so many people have taken it up?

Really-don-t , Hearings , Big-lie , Conspiracy-theory , Us , Electorate , Capitol-hill , Us-capitol , January-6-2021 , 2021 , 6 , May-ijust

The Media Show

he chose to fly to canada to give a iii—minute ted talk is a valid question in my opinion. so the issue here is that we don't want bristol city council or the mayor's office to pick and choose which journalists ask questions at these fortnightly press briefings. ijust have to add here that the bristol city council spokesperson gave us a statement, which said it is completely false that the local democracy reporters have been banned. "all media outlets had been invited, there's been long—standing mutual agreement about personnel attending press conferences whenever they announced and held, and that ldrs would not be sent due to the narrow definition of their role as an impartial service." they say that they never did go to these briefings. charlotte green, let's just bring you in. you are a local

May-ijust , Mayor , Journalists , Issue , Opinion , Office , Bristol-city-council , Ted-talk , Canada , Questions , Ijust , Fortnightly-press-briefings

The Media Show

the presence of ldrs is so important. let me bring you and, because i guess it didn't look like good pr there, did it? no, it's a really pr mess up i would say. i think it all comes down to the key thing, which is reputation. that is what pr is about. it is about establishing good reputations and then keeping them there. and what happens when somebody tries to duck an issue, particularly somebody who is in a publicly funded role, and it is all about accountability. when that is threatened, it makes people trying to manage the communication and trying to manage that narrative, it makes them look bad, doesn't it? and frankly it makes them look like they have something to hide. it is something we always say we media train some of our clients, and we say never duck the issue of a question because why would you do that? you can answer it in a very small way. it can be a really bland and boring answer, but you have to answer it.

Ldrs , Pr , Presence , Pr-mess-up , Thing , People , Role , Somebody , Issue , Accountability , Reputation , Reputations

The Media Show

and secondly, why you couldn't use zoom instead? ok, so you liked the talk? what did you think of the argument i made in it? yeah, i thought it was very interesting, but ijust thought about the irony... let's work through this. do you know what the fundamental argument i made in the talk was? sorry, i thought we were asking you questions. i'm just trying to see if we're on the same ground. that's the bristol mayor, marvin rees, and local democracy reporter alex seabrook, known as an ldr. that exchange then continued for a while and remained as tense, i've got to say. then the press officer got involved. and on that topic, then... alex, may ijust ask a question? - just in terms of your role as an ldr. - so, from my understanding, it would be to report - and provide impartial coverage regarding the regular workingsj of local authorities - and public sector bodies, and so i suppose my questionl is that marvin was fully funded by ted to attend this - conference, so i couldn't quite understand what the role as an ldr would be in. asking those questions?

It , Work , Talk , Argument , Irony , Couldn-t , Ijust , Democracy , May-ijust , At-bristol , Mayor , Reporter

The Media Show

registers, that sort of thing. a press briefing by the mayor, which is already attended by mainstream titles, doesn't merit the presence of a local democracy reporter? it is a good question. at bristol 24—7, we are an independent media company. we are incredibly under resourced, so we are not able to attend every press briefing ourselves, so it's opportunities like that that we very much rely on the service that the ldrs can provide. and then there is the hyper—local publications, bristol has — bristol has actually got a really buoyant immediate scene, and below the surface, in print, there is still the hyper—local publications. one of the best things about the ldr scheme is that the content is shared out between everyone from bbc news to online publications like ourselves to this hyper—local publications. they are not going to be able to have a seat in the mayor's briefing, so that is why

Thing , Democracy , Mayor , Reporter , Presence , Press-briefing , Doesn-t , Titles , May-ijust , At-bristol , Ldrs , Press

The Media Show

we have a free press and a journalist is in within their rights to keep pushing that question. i'm surprised — and maybe he did — that the reporter didn't go back there again, because i would say any journalist sitting in front of a publicly funded figure is within their right to ask that question. just to be clear, the mayor did answer that question. ijust wanted to bring it in. he did. it was a tense exchange but he did answer the question. you are a community organiser for local reporters with the bureau of investigativejournalism. you are also a journalist yourself. what is your experience of working with councils? i mean, frankly, i think we have all been done a favour if a man had never written in the thick of it, because it would only be halfjoking. it sometimes feels like communications managers think it is a documentary and a manualfor how you do

May-ijust , Journalist , Press , Rights , Mayor , Figure , Didn-t-go , Front , Right , The-reporter , Councils , Exchange