James Forsyth
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 43 |
Born | London |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | Allegra Stratton |
Siblings | Mark Forsyth |
Known for | The Spectator |
The Mail on Sunday | |
The Sun | |
Mail on Sunday | |
Children | 2 |
Education | Winchester College |
University of Cambridge | |
Jesus College, University of Cambridge | |
Date of birth | January 1,1981 |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 407992 |
James Forsyth Life story
James Forsyth is a British political aide and former political journalist. After serving as political editor of The Spectator magazine since 2009, he was appointed Political Secretary to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom by Rishi Sunak in December 2022.
Chris Mason: The week UK politics changed gear
... In truth, the precise timing will be decided by the prime minister and a tiny group of people around him; his best man turned political secretary James Forsyth, his chief of staff Liam Booth Smith and election strategist Issac Levido perhaps among a very limited few...
Downing Street party: Who is Allegra Stratton and why has she quit?
... " Power couple Ms Stratton is married to James Forsyth, political editor of the Spectator magazine...
The Papers: 'Survival' and 'floundering' in election debate
... James Forsyth for the Conservatives will be the happier of the two sides after what he regards as a scrappy affair ...
The Papers: 'Ready, steady, chaos' as Tory rebels 'face axe'
... James Forsyth thinks upping the stakes will have an impact on some waverers , arguing there will be those who are reluctant to end their careers in the party over this issue...
The Papers: 'Survival' and 'floundering' in election debate
There's plenty of analysis of Tuesday night's televised debate between Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in the papers.
Paul Waugh, suggests Mr Johnson "undeniably had The Best of The First half of The Debate , when it was focused on Brexit".
He finds that there was "no knockout blow" in "this political boxing match", but that Mr Corbyn "won several rounds on points".
A similar analogy is employed by, which concludes that Mr Johnson "kept [Mr Corbyn] on The Ropes ". "the judges' scorecards would have edged the Prime Minister ", who, he says, delivered "an assured performance".
For Quentin Letts in, The Event was "unexpectedly Good Sport " - "pacy, a little chaotic", with an audience that "deployed forced, supportive, mocking, occasionally disbelieving laughter as a weapon of attrition". He declares the moderator, ITV's Julie Etchingham , the "clear winner".
In its editorial, to "the people posing questions from The Audience ". It accuses both men of showing "little humility" when addressing the issue of trust, "instead turning their answers back to their main attack lines on Brexit and the NHS".
James Forsyth for the Conservatives "will be the happier of the Two Sides " after what he regards as a "scrappy affair". He expresses surprise that Mr Corbyn "didn't try and move to rally Remainers to him", Making It harder to "squeeze down the Liberal Democrat vote".
it to have been "The Debate of the crooked glasses" for the Labour leader, while Mr Johnson, it insists, "showed a clarity of vision". that Mr Corbyn "dodged" questions about whether he would support Leave or Remain in a second Brexit referendum nine times.
Fact checkingthat "genuine fact checking services and journalists" were "appalled" when the Conservative Party press office changed a Twitter account to resemble a fact-checking organisation during The Debate , condemning it as "a disingenuous move to con people into believing it was an independent account".
Its coverage includes a tweet from the former Conservative chairwoman, Sayeeda Warsi, questioning why she "didn't get the memo" about the name change.
A spokesman for The Independent fact-checking charity Full Fact that it has reported it to Twitter, and questions whether the account should retain its blue tick verifying its authenticity.
Sees it as a "gross subversion of democracy". According to its Digital Culture writer Sarah Manavis, it is "a disinformation tactic that not even Donald Trump has stooped to" which "echoes Russian dissemination tricks" and was "executed. . with sinister intent".
'Pariah Prince'As it emerges that Prince Andrew has cancelled a planned visit to flood-hit villages in West Yorkshire , he has become the "pariah Prince" for his links to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein .
Friends of The Duke of York he was "terrified about being booed by members of The Public ". The Paper says he was "summoned for crisis talks at Buckingham Palace " on Tuesday morning amid mounting pressure for him to step down from public duties.
Senior figures at the English National Ballet are to be "lobbying for The Duke to be removed as patron".
claims that his royal protection officers are being urged to release their notes of his whereabouts on The Night he denies having sex with one of Epstein's alleged victims.
Maternity 'tragedy'Several papers feature case studies of some of The Women affected by the maternity deaths at Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Trust. The Daily Mail condemns it as a "shameful tragedy" and reveals how its exposure of The Scandal was dismissed as "irresponsible" and. It calls for the culture of "obfuscation and cover-up" to "change immediately".
by The Failures , describing it as "the gravest maternity scandal in NHS history". It says "No One has carried The Can " for "dozens of babies and mothers dying unavoidably" through "40 Years of failure and epic incompetence", and adds that the "police must now step in".
Breast cancer drugsa study which has concluded that drugs commonly used to treat arthritis could help prevent the spread of breast cancer. It says researchers in Manchester and Sheffield found that the three drugs blocked the bone marrow from releasing a protein that helps cancerous cells to grow and make secondary tumours in bones.
A long slogIn what may be depressing news for many of us, a study by The Office for National Statistics, which has found that we should all work until we're 70. The Report says improvements to health and Life Expectancy mean Old Age no longer starts at 65.
Source of news: bbc.com