The ethics of "off the record"
Some of my more gentle colleagues raised an eyebrow when they saw David Cameron's remarks about "Amazon-gate" broadcast, when he was quizzed about the Devonwall issue on ITV Westcountry last week. One Cornwall councillor told me that in his opinion it had been wrong to broadcast remarks which the Prime Minister thought were private.
This is not the first time something like this has happened. Gordon Brown never intended his "bigot-gate" remarks to be heard during the general election campaign. John Major, when he was Prime Minister, did not intend his description of cabinet colleagues as "bastards" to be heard by anyone other than the former ITN political editor Michael Brunson - he was also unaware that his microphone was "active" and being recorded in another room.
David Cameron's gaffe, at the Conservative Party conference, came about because he apparently did not realise the camera was recording. Well, he should have known. Regional television crews take it in turns to get their own political correspondents into the "hot seat" opposite the Prime Minister. About three minutes each is the usual deal and the whole thing takes about half an hour of the Prime Minister's time.
The cameras are in position the whole time. They record the whole time. David Cameron has done this every year since becoming leader of his party and can have no excuse for thinking the cameras were switched off.
This leads me to the wider point - that it is the journalist, and not the politician, who decides what is and what is not "off the record." There is a very simple rule - everything is on the record, unless specifically agreed in advance. Were it to be otherwise there would be no such thing as journalism - there would be only dictation.
Comment number 1.
At 11th Oct 2010, P_Trembath wrote:"...it is the journalist, and not the politician, who decides what is and what is not "off the record."
But only then, if it is a means to further the story.
We want to know what our politicians actually think, and not just what they want to tell us they think.
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Comment number 2.
At 12th Oct 2010, Peter Tregantle wrote:Politicians broke the trust barrier when they said we could have a vote on Europe and then one Scottish dictator sold us out
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Comment number 3.
At 12th Oct 2010, P_Trembath wrote:Peter Tregantle wrote:-
"Politicians broke the trust barrier when they said we could have a vote on Europe...."
I think you will find that the "trust barrier" was broken long before that.
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Comment number 4.
At 12th Oct 2010, Peter Tregantle wrote:Tremmy said - We want to know what our politicians actually think, and not just what they want to tell us they think.
Here is a radical idea why dont you ask them (your quote)
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Comment number 5.
At 12th Oct 2010, P_Trembath wrote:Are you for real?
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