Hannan: so now you know how it feels

Hands on head

Hands on headIt was with a wry smile that I read Daniel Hannan’s blog post about how he feels he has been harshly treated by the Financial Times. I’m not sure about the pros and cons of the case itself, but welcome to the club Daniel – you’ve just faced a newspaper writing something about the EU that you think is wrong and twisted, something that europhiles end up feeling on an everyday basis when they read the British press. The FT article in question was surely a lot less twisted than The Times leader a few days ago about the EP that I’ve previously blogged about. A summary of the recent over-reactions to the MEP fraud allegations (demonstrating how europhiles can feel under siege) can be found in The Economist’s Brussels blog here.

Hannan’s whine about the FT also raises further questions about the role of his blog. When does a blog for a national newspaper cease to be a journalist’s blog and start to become a political campaign? Is it appropriate to have a dissident Tory blogging about his own personal issues with the EPP off the website of a national newspaper? OK, plenty of Telegraph readers might agree with Hannan’s line, but where does journalist blogging end and political blogging start?

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  • 25.02.2008
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Jon Worth's Euroblog
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