Paul Routledge

Paul Routledge (/ˈrtlɛ/; born 11 December 1943)[1] is an English journalist. Routledge currently writes for the Daily Mirror,[2] where he is a political correspondent, and is considered 'Old Labour' in his political outlook.[3]

Biography

Born in Yorkshire, he is the son of a railway clerk, although most of his male relatives were miners.[4] After an education at Normanton Grammar School and Nottingham University, where he read English, Routledge began his career in journalism on graduation. By 1969 he was working for The Times on the Labour relations desk, later becoming Labour editor. Following a brief period in Singapore,[1] he joined The Observer (in 1986) shortly after the Wapping dispute.[4] When The Guardian took over that newspaper, he left for the Independent on Sunday.

In 1985, Routledge was the subject of much controversy in the British media after he engaged in a discussion on the miners' strike with the Queen, which is against convention of Royal visits. After being denounced by much of the tabloid press, he was forced to apologise for this by The Times, but later said that his apology was inaccurate.[5] In the introduction to his biography of Arthur Scargill, Routledge states that he had missed the briefing on how to behave during the visit, as he was originally due to miss the event to cover an NUM meeting in Sheffield.[6] He gives an account of the conversation of 28 February 1985:

The Queen volunteered that she had been down a coal mine in Scotland, which had closed not long after. Innocently, I asked what her feelings about the strike were. She thought it "very sad", and after a pause added "It's all about one man, isn't it?" - or words to very similar effect. I wasn't taking notes, nor was anyone else. Evidently, it was not done. I offered the view that perhaps it wasn't about one man: knowing the miners, having been brought up among them, I thought that one man couldn't bring out 100,000 men for a whole year. There was a pregnant pause, and the royal party moved on. The exchange had taken thirty seconds at most.[5]

He has written biographies of Gordon Brown, Peter Mandelson, Arthur Scargill and Airey Neave.

gollark: Interesting fact: Feature wise, AV1 is specifically designed for real-time applications (especially WebRTC) and higher resolutions (wider color gamuts, higher frame rates, UHD) than typical usage scenarios of the current generation (H.264) of video formats, where it is expected to achieve its biggest efficiency gains. It is therefore planned to support the color space from ITU-R Recommendation BT.2020 and up to 12 bits of precision per color component. AV1 is primarily intended for lossy encoding, although lossless compression is supported as well.
gollark: Does anyone?
gollark: It might be for Verilog.
gollark: On Macos, yes.
gollark: It *cannot* compile really fast, the compiler is a horrible assemblage of broken regices, the automatic memory management just leaks, C to V translation has not been demonstrated to work usefully.

References

  1. Dennis Griffiths (ed.) The Encyclopedia of the British Press, 1422–1992, London and Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1992, p.498–99
  2. "Paul Routledge". Daily Mirror. Trinity Mirror. 10 October 2011.
  3. John Walton (16 January 1999). "The author of political scandal". BBC News. Retrieved 10 October 2011.
  4. Ian Aitken "The New Statesman Profile - Paul Routledge", New Statesman, 15 January 1999
  5. Routledge, Paul (1994). Scargill: the unauthorized biography. London: Harper Collins. p. xiii. ISBN 0-00-638077-8.
  6. Routledge, Paul (1994). Scargill: the unauthorized biography. London: Harper Collins. p. xii. ISBN 0-00-638077-8.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.