arganoid: (Default)
[personal profile] arganoid

https://www.facebook.com/martin.fletcher.3998/posts/10154422902371062


Martin Fletcher — 17th June 2016:


"Appalled as I am at the prospect of my country voting to leave the European Union next week, I am hardly surprised. 


 For 25 years our press has fed the British public a diet of distorted,  mendacious and relentlessly hostile stories about the EU - and the  journalist who set the tone was Boris Johnson.


I know this  because I was appointed Brussels correspondent of The Times in 1999, a  few years after Johnson’s stint there for The Telegraph, and I had to  live with the consequences.


Johnson, sacked by The Times in 1988  for fabricating a quote, made his mark in Brussels not through fair and  balanced reporting, but through extreme euro-scepticism. He seized every  chance to mock or denigrate the EU, filing stories that were  undoubtedly colourful but also grotesquely exaggerated or completely  untrue.


The Telegraph loved it. So did the Tory Right. Johnson  later confessed:  “Everything I wrote from Brussels, I found was sort of  chucking these rocks over the garden wall and I listened to this  amazing crash from the greenhouse next door over in England as  everything I wrote from Brussels was having this amazing, explosive  effect on the Tory party, and it really gave me this I suppose rather  weird sense of power."



Johnson’s reports also had an amazing,  explosive effect on the rest of Fleet Street. They were much more fun  than the usual dry and rather complex Brussels fare. News editors on  other papers, particularly but not exclusively the tabloids, started  pressing their own correspondents to match them. By the time I arrived  in Brussels editors only wanted stories about faceless Brussels  eurocrats imposing absurd rules on Britain, or scheming  Europeans  ganging up on us, or British prime ministers fighting plucky rearguard  actions against a hostile continent. Much of Fleet Street seemed unable  to view the EU through any other prism. It was the only narrative it was  interested in.


Stories that did not bash Brussels, stories that  acknowledged the EU’s many achievements, stories that recognised that  Britain had many natural allies in Europe and often won important  arguments, almost invariably ended up on the spike. 


Boris  Johnson is now campaigning against the cartoon caricature of the EU that  he himself created. He is campaigning against a largely fictional EU  that bears no relation to reality. That is why he and his fellow  Brexiteers could win next week. Johnson may be witty and amusing, just  as Donald Rumsfeld was in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, but he is  extremely dangerous. What began as a bit of a jape could inflict  terrible damage on this country.


Fight back!!!!!!"


Profile

arganoid: (Default)
Andrew Gillett

November 2025

S M T W T F S
      1
23 45678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Feb. 17th, 2026 03:23 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios