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Boris Johnson
quit journalism for politics because he felt guilty about “abusing or attacking
people” without putting himself in their shoes, he told a group of
schoolchildren on Tuesday.
“I was like a
journalist for a long time, I still am really, I still write stuff,” he told
pupils at Sedgehill Academy in south-east London. “But when you’re a
journalist, it’s a great, great job, it’s a great profession, but the trouble
is that you sometimes find yourself always abusing people or attacking people.”
He continued:
“Not that you want to abuse them or attack them, but you’re being critical …
maybe you feel sometimes a bit guilty about that because you haven’t put
yourself in the place of the person you’re criticising, and so I thought I’d
give it a go.”
The prime
minister’s press secretary, Allegra Stratton, said Johnson was referring to the
job of reporters in holding the government to account, saying: “That is the
prime minister talking about the fact that you … as journalists your job is to
constantly challenge and that’s something that makes all of us in government
better.”
But others
may reflect on Johnson’s record of writing in derogatory terms about groups
other than politicians without necessarily “putting yourself in the place of
the person you’re criticising”.
In a 2018
column for the Daily Telegraph, he wrote that women who wore burkas were
choosing “to go around looking like letter boxes” or “a bank robber”. In a 2002
column for the same newspaper, he described black people as “piccaninnies” and
referred to “watermelon smiles”, language for which he later apologised but
claimed had been taken out of context. In a 1998 column, again for the
Telegraph, he used the phrase “tank-topped bumboys” to describe gay men.
By the time
he finally gave up the column when he became foreign secretary, Johnson was
paid £275,000 a year, about £4.80 a word.
As well as a
columnist for the Daily Telegraph, he was a Brussels reporter for the same
newspaper and editor of the Spectator. As a reporter he had a reputation for filing
exaggerated, if colourful, stories and was famously fired from his first job at
the Times after making up a quote and attributing it to his godfather.
Since
changing professions, the prime minister is said to have sometimes taken
umbrage when facing negative press himself. The columnist and former newspaper
editor Sir Max Hastings wrote in 2019: “I have handwritten notes from our
possible next prime minister, threatening dire consequences in print if I
continued to criticise him.”
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