
Media Confidential Is the Westminster lobby a victim of groupthink?
9 snips
Mar 2, 2026 George Parker, long‑time FT political editor, offers firsthand tales of the Lobby’s workings. Ailbhe Rea, New Statesman political editor, provides sharp insider analysis of sourcing and briefings. They explore how briefings, anonymous tips and daily lobby routines shape Westminster stories. They debate herd mentality versus forensic scrutiny and the ethics of secrecy in political reporting.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Lobby Moments Can Create Real Leadership Peril
- The lobby can amplify elite dissent into perceived leadership peril quickly.
- George Parker and Ailbhe Rea argue Anna Soubry's call created a brief clarifying crisis that felt like Starmer might resign.
A Day In The Lobby Begins With A Downing Street Briefing
- George Parker describes a typical lobby day built around the morning Downing Street briefing.
- He starts at 7am, mixes briefings, breakfasts and corridor sourcing, and finishes around 7pm.
Anonymous Sources Reveal Secrets And Spread Smears
- Anonymous sourcing is a double-edged tool that reveals private thinking but enables smears.
- George Parker admits British outlets use anonymous off-the-record lines more than US counterparts, risking irresponsible rumours.
