Labour invites bloggers to minister’s briefing

May 30, 2009 2:31 pm

By Mark Hanson

There have been ripples of curiosity in the blogosphere about the decision by Labour’s press team to include bloggers in the daily briefings being given to journalists in advance of the Euro elections.

Jack Straw did one on crime and constitutional affairs on Wednesday with Ed Balls on Children, Schools and Families the following day.

I went along to the Straw session, held at 39 Victoria Street and this is how it went:

It was billed at 10:45 for 11am start but Straw was late, keeping everyone waiting in the holding room for about twenty minutes!

He then did a 5 minute summary of the choice facing the electorate on law and order. We’d all been handed an A4 document beforehand with Labour’s achievements on crime down one side and the Tories shortcomings on the other and his talk was a summary of that.

Unlike on the West Wing or at the PM’s monthly press conference, it isn’t a free-for-all in terms of asking questions. Basically Labour’s press team have a list of attendees and each one is called out and offered the chance to ask one question plus one follow up. I couldn’t work out what order people journalists were asked.

There were about 20 press from the lobby/home affairs beat, so that meant 40 questions about law and order…..er no, about 6 questions about crime and the rest about MPs expenses.

Don’t say it; they’re one and the same.

Related posts:

  1. Ministers, expenses and the speaker – where next?
  2. The government response to the wildcat strikes: a full briefing for those interested
  3. Many bloggers’ most frequent contribution to political debate is running commentary on other blogs – who cares?
  4. Some ministers are positioning themselves for election defeat – we need to be working to avoid that calamity

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