首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
A、The Sun. B、The Daily Mirror. C、The Daily Mail. D、The News Briefs. D
A、The Sun. B、The Daily Mirror. C、The Daily Mail. D、The News Briefs. D
admin
2017-03-15
31
问题
In the seaside town of Brighton in southern England the ruling Labour Party’s annual conference is getting underway. It’s a time for both MPs and grassroots members to take stock of how the party is doing, to discuss policy and to hear, hopefully, inspiring speeches. The party delegates will be hoping too for plenty of coverage from the media assembled there. Sometimes in politics it appears it’s not so much what you do but what you seem to be doing that counts, and for politicians public relations can seem to be as important as policies.
Newspapers in Britain have long had great influence over Governments, much to the resentment of the politicians. Almost seventy-five years ago, the then Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin accused the two big press barons, Lords Beaverbrook and Rothermere, of running their papers as "engines of propaganda" for the "personal wishes and dislikes of two men". He famously accused them of seeking "power without responsibility—the prerogative of the harlot throughout the ages". It’s hard to imagine the current Prime Minister Tony Blair attacking the tabloid press so publicly.
A book out this week, written by one of his former press advisers, claims he was "obsessed" with the media during his first term in Government, sometimes making up policy on the hoof simply to give newspapers and broadcasters a story. On one occasion, it says, Mr. Blair was due to go on breakfast television with the veteran interviewer Sir David Frost and the Sunday papers were full of reports of a new rift with his Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown. The book’s author, Lance Price, describes in his diary the response of the Prime Minister’s press office: "Our aim is to knock the story out by coming up with a better one. So with half an hour to go before Tony Blair’s appearance, we decide to launch a war on drugs."
An announcement was rushed out that crime suspects would face mandatory drugs tests, a policy that then had to be squared with the minister and officials in charge of drugs policy. Mr. Blair has courted tabloid newspaper editors assiduously. The former editor of the Daily Mirror Piers Morgan claimed earlier this year that he met the Labour leader no fewer than fifty-eight times for lunches, dinners or interviews, a statistic which astonished many in Government and the media, who thought a party leader and Prime Minister should have had better ways to spend his time. But Tony-Blair has good reason to court the press. In Britain, Labour, left-of-centre governments, have always had problems with national newspapers, most of whose owners traditionally supported the right-of-centre Conservative Party. This came to a head on Election Day in 1992 when Labour seemed set to win power for the first time in eighteen years.
In those days, Britain’s biggest-selling daily paper, The Sun, part of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire, was no friend of Labour, indeed it had been Margaret Thatcher’s biggest cheerleader. That morning, on its front page, it depicted the bald head of the then Labour leader Neil Kinnock as a light bulb. Alongside ran the headline: "If Kinnock wins today, will the last person to leave Britain please turn out the lights?" Labour lost. By the next election, Tony Blair was the party’s leader and determined to win over, or at least neutralise, The Sun and its owner. He succeeded, moving the Labour Party towards the centre ground, and gaining The Sun’s endorsement at the last three elections.
Once in Government, Labour played hardball with the media, relishing its power, and aware that if it didn’t take charge of the agenda, the media would.
Its key figure was the former political editor of the Daily Mirror, Alastair Campbell, who took charge not just of the Prime Minister’s press office but all government press officers, trying to ensure the Government spoke with one voice. Journalists who reported favourably were given privileged access, those who didn’t were frozen out.
Mr. Blair maintained his close links with Rupert Murdoch and his newspapers, doing everything he could to maintain their support. Lance Price claims in his diaries that the Government assured the tycoon and his editors that it wouldn’t change its policy on Europe without asking them. The Prime Minister also built a relationship with another Conservative newspaper, the mid-market Daily Mail, which has a sure instinct for the issues and policies that concern the British middle classes. The Mail led a campaign to reduce the number of asylum seekers coming to Britain and it’s often said that in trying to show they’re tough on criminals and the causes of crime Blair and his ministers are following the Daily Mail’s agenda.
But Lance Price says the Government’s obsession with the media can be counter-productive. "You have to understand the power the media has, but it is unwise to become a complete slave to that," he writes. "If you are too preoccupied with what the media are doing, you run the risk of doing things to produce headlines rather than what is good for the country."
16. MPs and grassroots members are supposed to do several things during the Labour Party’s annual conference. Which of the following issues is NOT one of them?
17. What did the former Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin accuse the two big press barons of?
18. What did the Prime Minister’s press office decide to do half an hour before Tony Blair’s interview?
19. Which of the following daily papers is not mentioned in the talk?
20. What’s the best title for this talk?
选项
A、The Sun.
B、The Daily Mirror.
C、The Daily Mail.
D、The News Briefs.
答案
D
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/MlCYFFFM
本试题收录于:
NAETI高级口译笔试题库外语翻译证书(NAETI)分类
0
NAETI高级口译笔试
外语翻译证书(NAETI)
相关试题推荐
AlthoughtherearemanyskillfulBraillereaders,thousandsofotherblindpeoplefinditdifficulttolearnthatsystemTheyar
Aleading________intelligenceandoperationscompanyhasreleaseditsanalysisofworldwidereportedincidentsofpiracyandcri
Elaineisawomanwhollyincontrolofherbodyandheractions,andherhilariousdeterminationtofindherownhappily-ever-af
加强区域能源合作共创亚太美好未来资源节约与综合利用司副司长 刘显法2002年7月25日各位来宾、女士们、先生们:上午好!今天,我们在这里
海洋是全球生命支持系统的一个不可缺少的组成部分。海洋不仅是自然资源的宝库,同时也是我们人类居住环境的重要调节器。中国政府高度重视海洋的开发和保护,不断加强海洋综合管理,促进海洋产业的协调发展。中国已经形成了具有区域特征的多学科的海洋科学体系。国家
Thankyou,Mr.Bishop,AssistantViceMinisterLi,ChinesePeople’sAssociationforFriendshipwithForeignCountriesPresident
A、therewasaseriousleakageproblemwiththepipelineB、thepipelinesufferedasmallleakandseverecorrosionC、betterpipel
ThemovieactorArnoldSchwargenegger,whoisrunningforgovernorofCalifornia,belongstotheconservativeDemocraticParty.
AccordingtotheWHO,environmentalpollutionisaffectingmostchildrenthroughouttheworld.
大剧院位于市中心人民广场,建筑风格新颖别致,造型优美,是本市的一个标志性建筑。大剧院独特的建筑风格,融汇了东西方的文化韵味。白色弧形拱顶和具有光感的玻璃幕墙有机结合,在灯光的烘托下,宛如一个水晶般的宫殿。大剧院大堂的主要色调为白色,高雅而圣
随机试题
下列有关大肠菌群平板计数的描述,正确的是()。
简述计划的编制过程。
成功源于科学的激励方法巴斯夫公司是一家生产各种农业化学品的具有一百多、年历史的大型公司,其经营着世界上最大的化工厂,并在35个国家中拥有300多家分公司和合资经营企业及各种工厂,拥有雇员13万人。巴斯夫公司之所以能够在百年经营中兴旺不衰,在很大程度上
眼的近反射包括下列
《城乡规划法》规定,临时建设工程的使用期限一般不超过()年。
关于塔器水压试验程序的说法,正确的是()。
会计职业道德体系的框架结构与基本内容主要由()构成。
已知向量a,b不共线,c=ka+b(k∈R),d=a-b,如果c∥d,那么()
任何国家,只有稳定,才能发展。以下各项都符合题干的条件,除了:()
FromMondayuntilFriday【36】peoplearebusyworkingorstudying,butintheeveningsand【37】weekendstheyarefreetoenjoythem
最新回复
(
0
)