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Greg Dyke

Published 17 May 2007

Greg Dyke gives his views on the British media over the last ten years.

There is no doubt that when Blair and the Labour Government came to power they were lacking in confidence and, in particular, were paranoid about the media. As Tony Blair said on many occasions he was not going to let The Sun do to him what they did to Neil Kinnock.

What this meant in action was that Blair, supported by the Privy Council, gave unprecedented power to Alistair Campbell to control the whole of the Government’s information services. The result was an incredibly centralised Government media machine where spin became all.

Ministers had to take orders from Campbell on what to say and where to be interviewed, policies were made up on the hoof to look and sound good to the public, and on many occasions it didn’t matter if what was said was actually true.

For the first time we saw Nixonian politics in the UK – if you questioned or disagreed with the Government you became the enemy. It didn’t matter who or what you were – civil servant, Labour politician or journalist - Campbell and his henchmen would brief against you and try to humiliate you if you disagreed with the message they wanted out there.

In the case of Iraq it resulted in them doctoring a ten year old university thesis and publishing it as “intelligence” and it came to a head a year or so later with Dr David Kelly where Campbell’s people did everything they could to get his name into the public arena. As we know he eventually committed suicide as a result of the pressure.

But the spin continued right through to the very end with the sickening stage management of Blair’s leaving announcement. It was a Government where image meant so much more than substance which in turn meant the good things it did over ten years ended up being dwarfed by spin.

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2 comments from readers

Graham
17 May 2007 at 13:23

"All that is necessary for evil to succeed is that good men do nothing." - Edmund Burke

Pity Dyke didn't get his scruples until the end of his tenure.

topcat
17 May 2007 at 19:41

The change that the Campbell-Blair partnership has brought to the media is devastating. Neither the media nor the public can believe anything that comes from Downing Street or the Government anymore, and woe betide any civil servant that might simply present spin-free facts. For a barrister, Blair pays little heed to precision when it comes to the facts. He has rarely (if ever) returned to the House of Commons to set the record straight in accordance wiith the Ministerial code when he has misled us - even if he thought what he was saying was right at the time. I hope that Brown is able to redress this balance so that we can trust what our Government tells us again - we've had enough of bluster and lies.

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About the writer

Greg Dyke

Greg Dyke was Director-General of the BBC between January 2000 January 2004.

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