Inside Track

Inside Track

by RobinOakley (Author)

Synopsis

For 30 years Robin Oakley has reported from the front-line of British politics. Throughout the 1990s his was one of the BBC's most familiar faces on the Nine O'Clock News , as night after night he stood outside the Houses of Parliament or 10 Downing Street, telling us about the highs and lows of political life, the swings and roundabouts of cabinet reshuffles, and the machinations and intrigues of top politicians. He has been a newspaper and television journalist all his working life. Having started out at the Liverpool Post in the 1960s, he moved to the Sunday Express in the 1970s, the Daily Mail in the 1980s, before becoming political editor of The Times - the best job in journalism he was told - in 1986. He reported on Margaret Thatcher when she was in full throttle and when she was driven out of office; on John Major's subsequent rise to power and the Gulf War; and he was there when New Labour swept to power. He has acted as Thatcher's official photographer in Siberia, and sat beside Blair as Alastair Campbell rewrote one of keynote speeches. Few people have been on the inside track of political journalism for longer than he has. Now, after his much publicized early retirement from the Nine O'Clock News , he gives us the full account of his time at the BBC, discusses his relationship with top politicians, and offers his thoughts on television journalism and the impact of the politics today. Peppered with anecdotes and spiced with controversial insights into the workings of today's press, Inside Track shows us what it's really like to be a journalist stalking the corridors of power.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 416
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Corgi Books
Published: 02 Sep 2002

ISBN 10: 0552148814
ISBN 13: 9780552148818
Book Overview: Insights and intrigues of a lifetime's reporting from Robin Oakley, ex-BBC political editor, and successor to John Cole.

Author Bio
Robin Oakley has had many of the top jobs in Fleet Street, having worked for the Liverpool Daily Post, the Sunday Express, the Daily Mail, and The Times, before moving to the BBC as political editor in 1992. He is a regular contributor to BBC Radio 4, writes a racing column for the Spectator, and is now European Political Editor for the American glant CNN. He lives in London and is married with two children.