Those of a leftist disposition are almost uniformly completely bereft of any self awareness of their true position in the political spectrum.  Remarks one of the contributors to Insight Guides latest edition of its travel guide entitled England,

“Although free from state control and financially independent of political parties, many nationals do have pronounced political leanings.  Of the quality dailies The Times and The Daily Telegraph are on the right, The Guardian and The Independent in the middle.  On Sunday The Observer leans slightly left of centre, while the Independent on Sunday stands in the middle and The Sunday Times and The Sunday Telegraph are on the right.

 

The Financial Times is renowned for the clearest, most unbiased headlines in its general news pages plus exhaustive financial coverage.”

I am sure that The Times will be irked to learn that it is “of the right” given its pretence of being a newspaper of record and having openly supported the Labour Party in the General Elections of 1997, 2001 and 2005.   As everyone else seems to be aware, The Guardian is the newspaper of choice of the centre-left and left because… it is of the centre-left, as is The Independent, which tried unsuccessfully to usurp The Guardian as the Left’s newspaper of choice.  As for The Financial Times well, until the 2010 General Election it had been a steadfast cheerleader for the Labour Party (and steadily lost market share amongst its core business readership as a result) since well before the 1997 election.

 

Those engaged in journalism, publishing and The Arts generally are largely of a “progressive”, centre-left and left persuasion. Surrounded almost exclusively by like-minded individuals, they suffer a red-shift in perception as to their true position in the political Universe.