By Ruth Garland This election campaign may be fascinating to the experts but it is almost guaranteed to irritate if not infuriate members of the public, as we saw when last night’s Question Time audience met the three leaders one by one. They could have been interviewing them for a job, in which case, they might have concluded that the job needed to be re-advertised and that ‘previous applicants need not apply’
As reports into why Labour lost the 2015 British general election and why the opinion polls got the ...
A commentator on LBC Radio last week has declared that whilst this is undoubtedly a ‘Brexit election...
The involvement of celebrities in politics raises issues of legitimacy and representation, and fuels...
This article was first published by the Political Studies Association as part of an excellent collec...
The extraordinary resignation of its chief political editor, Peter Oborne, from the Daily Telegraph ...
Launching the Labour party’s general election campaign on 5 January, Ed Miliband estimated that the ...
LSE Professor Emeritus Rodney Barker discusses the challenges faced by Gordon Brown and David Camero...
Party leaders – from Tony Blair to David Cameron – have promised a new way of doing politics when ca...
David Cameron seems to have been channelling the spirit of Margaret Thatcher in the opening weeks of...
The previous campaign of 2010 produced electoral firsts in media terms (the televised leaders' debat...
In academic political communications studies there is this idea of the ‘informed society’. I even on...
Culture Secretary Tess Jowell spoke for many politicians when she complained that the 2005 general e...
This is a weird election, especially from a media point of view. As I predicted, it is the TV electi...
Britain’s famous red top newspapers struggle to find their voice in general electio
What does the recent public shaming and subsequent exoneration of Jack Straw and Malcolm Rifkind ove...
As reports into why Labour lost the 2015 British general election and why the opinion polls got the ...
A commentator on LBC Radio last week has declared that whilst this is undoubtedly a ‘Brexit election...
The involvement of celebrities in politics raises issues of legitimacy and representation, and fuels...
This article was first published by the Political Studies Association as part of an excellent collec...
The extraordinary resignation of its chief political editor, Peter Oborne, from the Daily Telegraph ...
Launching the Labour party’s general election campaign on 5 January, Ed Miliband estimated that the ...
LSE Professor Emeritus Rodney Barker discusses the challenges faced by Gordon Brown and David Camero...
Party leaders – from Tony Blair to David Cameron – have promised a new way of doing politics when ca...
David Cameron seems to have been channelling the spirit of Margaret Thatcher in the opening weeks of...
The previous campaign of 2010 produced electoral firsts in media terms (the televised leaders' debat...
In academic political communications studies there is this idea of the ‘informed society’. I even on...
Culture Secretary Tess Jowell spoke for many politicians when she complained that the 2005 general e...
This is a weird election, especially from a media point of view. As I predicted, it is the TV electi...
Britain’s famous red top newspapers struggle to find their voice in general electio
What does the recent public shaming and subsequent exoneration of Jack Straw and Malcolm Rifkind ove...
As reports into why Labour lost the 2015 British general election and why the opinion polls got the ...
A commentator on LBC Radio last week has declared that whilst this is undoubtedly a ‘Brexit election...
The involvement of celebrities in politics raises issues of legitimacy and representation, and fuels...