The most depressing result from my analysis of media coverage of EU reform is the complete absence of substance and detail in the arguments presented. Politicians and commentators alike seem to think that by simply saying that the EU needs to change then that’s enough, argument won. If pushed, they roll out vague complaints like EU ‘social and labour law’ (20%), ‘too much regulation’ (27%) and maybe even a Euromyth (20%). The truly informed out there might even throw the working time directive at you (7%). Few, if any, can give you more detail than that.
This lays bare the appalling state of media coverage of European issues. I cannot think of another political topic where such lazy argumentation stands so little scrutiny.
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Much of the blame lies squarely with the media. Firstly, the press has failed in its duty to provide in-depth coverage and attention to the decisions taken at an EU-level and the institutions which take them.
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Serious coverage of political developments in the European Parliament, Council, Commission or indeed other EU countries is non-existent outside of the Economist and Financial Times. As the Charlemagne column reported some time ago, it is now rarer for daily British newspapers to have a Brussels correspondent than not.