Tagged with indecision 2010

Live debate – Ask The Chancellors

Tonight, Channel 4 hosts an Ask The Chancellors debate with all three parties at 8pm. Once again, I am using it as an opportunity to play with CoverItLive. There are two ways to join in the fun:

a) By going to my other blog, Max’s Playground, and watching it all unfold there.

b) By clicking here, which will take you straight to the panel in a much larger window.

See you all tonight at around 7:30pm!

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Local media and the 2010 election (Part 1)

Local media

I was going to do this as one post but I think that I’m going to split it into two. The second will look at new media styles of reporting (read: hyperlocal), but this part looks at how the traditional local media might cover the local elections. That said, upon reading back, it serves more as a description of the current context. I don’t feel like I’m explaining anything new, but these is my own thoughts, which are of particular interest to me at the moment given my dissertation topic. If I feel odd after posting it, I might try and expand on it or delete altogether. I don’t think my brain functions well on Saturday evenings.

Anyway…

General elections usually provide an absolute goldmine of news for the local media. Political candidates of all parties will be on the campaign trail and always eager to give good soundbites to make themselves come across as someone you want to vote for. This is also ample opportunity for the local newspapers to absolutely fill their pages with nothing else other than news of the campaign. Anything that is meaningless gets pushed aside because of the amount of news stories you could run on something as long-lasting as a general election.

At least, this is the theory. My fear however is that the press won’t be able to provide a comprehensive coverage of what is going on. There are two reasons for this:

  1. The amount of people in the local newsroom is far lower than what should be sufficient. These remaining journalists are put under a daily pressure to get as many stories as possible in order to fill up space in the paper, and most of the time theses stories fall under the ‘churnalism’ bracket – creating news stories out of pre-packaged materials like press releases and such. That’s why they didn’t put MPs under intense scrutiny when the MPs expenses scandal happened. A golden opportunity was missed.
  2. The communication between newsrooms and the community has shrunk. Of course, this is a generalisation and there are some exceptions to the rule (not to mention exceptional circumstances), but on the whole, if you compared things now to a time that was pre-internet then you’ll find that the difference is astonishing. Back in the day, both entities relied on each other to make sure that the community knew what was going on in the area – almost like a partnership.

I mean, for all I know, I could be proven entirely wrong. I would quite like to be proven wrong. I would quite like to be told that local newspapers can still seize on major news events. However, I think this year the local election news won’t be discovered in the local newspapers, but through newer news-gathering methods, which will be explained in the second post.

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How the Conservatives plan to ‘save’ the NHS

The NHS

The Tories have published their draft manifesto on health that they will implement if in power. You can read it for yourself here. All I’m going to say is that there are three things in this manifesto that are a little bit worrying and dubious:

  1. “We want to enable patients to rate hospitals and doctors according to the quality of their care” – This means that essentially they want to ignore all advice from professionals in the industry and hand over some of the power to the public who know nothing about these issues and are routinely mislead by the media.
  2. “We will reform the way drug companies are paid for NHS medicines so that any cost-effective treatment can be made available through the NHS, with drug providers paid according to the value of their new treatments”- Meaning that the party who want to eliminate quangos are going to – yes, you guessed it – set up more quangos.
  3. “You’re more likely to die of cancer in Britain than most other countries in Europe” – This statement is not just ignorant in the sense that it fails to consider a variety of factors that could affect the figures, but it is also an absolute lie, as this paper proves.

So, there you have it. In order to eradicate the misdirection and the ignorance of the last few years we’re about to elect a government that is built on…misdirection and ignorance. What’s more, the manifesto smacks of removing the cornerstone of our society – free healthcare. Nice one England!

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