Particularly alert readers may recall that we recently made a simple and seemingly innocuous Freedom Of Information request for the latest viewing/listening figures of two BBC Scotland politics programmes (Scotland 2015 and Good Morning Scotland), which was met with the standard BBC “get lost” response to any uppity licence-fee payer with the temerity to ask about how their money’s being spent.
We appealed to the Information Commissioner, and we’ve just received a prompt, and impressively detailed and specific, reply. We attach it below for your enlightenment.
For reasons best known to himself, and almost certainly NOT related to the recent publication of his new book, the BBC’s Nick Robinson has today chosen to reignite the issues surrounding his infamous questioning of Alex Salmond a week before last year’s independence referendum, claiming that the reaction to his presentation of the incident was reminiscent of “Putin’s Russia”.
The state broadcaster’s political correspondent then inflamed social media further by claiming on Twitter that a grassroots protest – neither instigated nor endorsed by the SNP or Yes Scotland – outside BBC Scotland’s headquarters in Glasgow a couple of days later was in fact organised by “a governing party”.
(Robinson also claimed the mob had been 4000-strong, although the BBC’s own report had put the figure at “up to 1000”. The demo was sedate and entirely peaceful – no arrests were made, nobody was hurt and no damage was caused.)
The footage showing that Robinson had lied on air about his encounter with Salmond was captured and published by this website, in a pair of videos which garnered well over 600,000 views on YouTube and one of the most-read posts in Wings history.
When we mentioned that fact earlier today, a reader asked what other posts were in the top 10. So we looked, and noticed that the biggest ones had a common theme.
Social media is alive today with tales of people being refused a vote in the Labour leadership election on the grounds that they don’t support Labour values (if anyone even knows what those are any more). We suspect you’ll be hearing quite a bit about it in the press over the coming days.
The prevailing reaction seems to be slack-jawed astonishment at the planetary-scale car-crash the party has allowed to develop around the issue, with another “coup” story thrown in for good measure in the Telegraph.
We can only think of one way the farce could become even worse.
Not our judgement, you understand, but that of Scottish Labour spokesclown Michael Kelly, former Lord Provost of Glasgow, speaking on today’s Good Morning Scotland:
So there’s definitely going to be a second referendum, the No campaign is going to win it again and a shattered SNP will collapse as a result, sending Labour triumphantly back to Holyrood power. (Having now come out on top in not one but two internal elections, presumably Kezia Dugdale is now also a “proven winner”.)
It’s just that we feel like we’ve heard that before somewhere.
An update, then: as we write, our anti-poverty fundraiser (which set out to gather just £500 for a young woman in Kidderminster fined almost £330 for stealing a 75p pack of Mars bars out of desperate hunger after her benefits were sanctioned) stands at a phenomenal £14,395.
This spoon-faced howler was pointed out mirthfully by vile cybernats days ago, but we suspect that the person at Scottish Labour who knows how to work the internets only comes in on Tuesdays and Thursdays. It’s going to be a long road back.
Earlier today Gordon Brown gave a speech in London, on a subject and for reasons which are unclear. It was widely trailed in the press, however, as an intervention in the Labour leadership campaign, with the particular goal of stopping Jeremy Corbyn from winning. It was – naturally – broadcast live and in full by the BBC News channel.
Corbyn wasn’t mentioned by name so far as we noticed, but to tell the truth we drifted in and out of the rambling, 49-minute, 30-page monologue full of celebrity namedrops and unconnected anecdotes, hypnotised as we were by Brown’s relentless pacing up and down the room like a caged animal.
Nobody who isn’t getting paid should have to endure the entire grimness of it, so using the magic of technology we’ve compressed it all down to a mere fraction of its length (just 20%) for you, but without losing any of the tone, content or intellectual nuance.
We offer it to you as an elegy. It marks the day that Labour reanimated the walking corpse of the only person left in the party that it considers to have any gravitas – not to win an election, but to try to crush the first man in living memory to enthuse tens of thousands of new members to join a political party in the hope of restoring the values it was created to uphold.
It is the day the soul of the Labour Party finally died.
Keen followers of First Minister’s Questions will doubtless be excited to witness the weekly jousts, as the dynamic new regime of Kezia Dugdale sweeps out the tired old broom of Labour’s previous FMQs inquisitor, er, Kezia Dugdale.
Curiously, while the BBC was present and broadcasting live at the announcement of the new leader and deputy, neither’s acceptance speech was broadcast on TV, radio or online, which may well have surprised viewers and listeners who’ve become used to 50-minute prime-time Gordon Brown “intervention” specials.
In Dugdale’s case, our best guess is that the BBC didn’t want to have to fact-check it.
There’s another rather bizarre Kenny Farquharson column in today’s Times. Under the headline “Holyrood wasn’t built for a one-party state”, it asserts that “the Scottish Parliament is no longer fit for purpose” on the grounds that the opposition parties are useless, as if that were the fault of the electoral system rather than their leaders.
After that, though, it just gets flat-out insulting.
The papers these days are full of horrendous stories. For some reason this one just tripped a nerve, and we wanted to do something. Click here for details.
GM on Irony you can’t buy: “Time will expose all. I hope so Lothianlad. I see my beloved country as a place that rewards human scum…” Mar 21, 03:30
Young Lochinvar on Looking up at the stars: “Not so quick now Baby Beggars.. You do recall how similar in Iraq and Afghanistan turned out don’t you? No…” Mar 21, 02:09
Young Lochinvar on Irony you can’t buy: “Ian Maybe this was the plan all along Inflame trends in “Kurskland” to tip the hair trigger “R”s into action…” Mar 21, 01:50
Young Lochinvar on Irony you can’t buy: “MB Baby Beggars seems apt don’t you think?” Mar 21, 01:12
Iain More on Irony you can’t buy: “I see that Starmer has caved into the Child Rapist Trump and the Jewish State.” Mar 21, 01:04
Cynicus on Irony you can’t buy: “Christine says “ […psychopaths] get what they want mostly through manipulation. Sturgeon was Commander in Chief who inflicted her cruel…” Mar 21, 00:42
robertkknight on Irony you can’t buy: “More neck than Melman the giraffe! If there’s any justice in this world she’s due at the very least a…” Mar 20, 21:38
George Ferguson on Irony you can’t buy: “Another post disappeared into the ether. I have worked out it out. A defunct 5 year old e mail account…” Mar 20, 21:15
Mark Beggan on Irony you can’t buy: “And it’s Mr Beggars to you.” Mar 20, 20:34
Alf Baird on Irony you can’t buy: “So-called ‘Nationalist’ elites retiring on fat colonial pensions tells us all we need to know – colonial administrators all. Mair…” Mar 20, 20:34
Mark Beggan on Irony you can’t buy: “That’s the financial damage and then there’s other damage. The lifes lost, the back stabbing, the lieing, the attack on…” Mar 20, 20:20
Southernbystander on Looking up at the stars: “NC: ‘In contrast to Persia’s great contribution to humanity America’s very, very few inventions include . . .’ Jazz?” Mar 20, 20:10
Geri on Looking up at the stars: “There won’t be much food coming anyway. That’s Qatar oot the game & with it the worlds fertiliser along with…” Mar 20, 20:04
Mark Beggan on Irony you can’t buy: “A war cant run itself you know. Just getting my Dragon Ladies in order. The Chief Turnip? You’ve got to…” Mar 20, 20:02
Young Lochinvar on Looking up at the stars: “Aidan No need to start by apologising Aidan. Thick am I? Well and well, just watched ITN. They must be…” Mar 20, 19:43
Geri on Irony you can’t buy: “Gawd. You’re right. We wouldn’t be that lucky. The failed politician will be wheeled out every now & again to…” Mar 20, 19:28
ABruce on Irony you can’t buy: “This thrawn wee besom really really shouldn’t have fooled us. I mean, who could possibly have any doubts about someone…” Mar 20, 19:28
Aidan on Looking up at the stars: “Sorry YL, I appreciate you aren’t that smart and to you this is all a bit of a mystery or…” Mar 20, 19:23
Young Lochinvar on Irony you can’t buy: “Where’s Hatey? Even Beggars has gone quiet.. Sorry my bad, celebrating Eid el fatr no doubt 🙂” Mar 20, 19:20
Iain More on Irony you can’t buy: “She churns my stomach like all Quislings do. The damage she has done to Scotland should bring charges of Treason…” Mar 20, 19:18
Geri on Irony you can’t buy: “I always liked Joanna. She’d have been a good FM. If she’d challenged Sturgeons leadership she’d have won it hands…” Mar 20, 19:15
Scot Finlayson on Irony you can’t buy: “`All political lives, unless they are cut off in midstream at a happy juncture, end in failure, because that is…” Mar 20, 18:52
TimePilot on Irony you can’t buy: “Oh, to see ourselves as others see us Nicola. If only Mr Salmond was still alive to recite this in…” Mar 20, 18:49
Young Lochinvar on Irony you can’t buy: “To add to the litany of comments already made I would add Branchform, sneaky Pete dropped like a hot potato…” Mar 20, 18:37
Young Lochinvar on Looking up at the stars: “Aidan Largest “ferry” port. Doesn’t the use of “ferries” in and out of a quarantined area strike you as rather…” Mar 20, 18:11
ScottieDog on Irony you can’t buy: “And a tidy pension. Wondering if she’ll become baroness sturgeon one day, sitting next to lord Blackford of humblecroft and…” Mar 20, 17:59
christine on Irony you can’t buy: “Failed lawyer Sturgeon peddled and condoned the genital mutilation of our children. She sanctioned the abuse, torment, degradation and trauma…” Mar 20, 17:49
agentx on Irony you can’t buy: “Ex-SNP MP Joanna Cherry: “It is easy to make a promise. Much harder to keep it. Sturgeon governed by press…” Mar 20, 17:01