Politics is a tough business.

The BBC should mirror the country.

I work long hours. I work very, very hard.

Human beings rarely do things for a binary reason.

Andrea Leadsom flatly denies she has changed her CV.

I would die in a ditch for the impartiality of the BBC.

I'm not friends with politicians. I'm not people's mate.

I don't read the comments people write about me - it's not worth it.

I'm well rewarded for a job I massively enjoy doing. I think I'm paid very fairly.

Andrea Leadsom promises to publish tax return tomorrow if she gets on ballot - it's boring.

People are deciding - if they don't like a particular point of view or a particular paper, it goes out of business.

We want people to watch and consume what we do, but we are not trying to sell anything. So that does give us a freedom in a way.

I think politics often seems remote, and anything we can do to show more of the workings - how you make the sausage - is useful.

Andrea Leadsom also denies any tax avoidance, says she 'shopped around' for a good deal and it was from a British bank that booked the biz in Jersey.

It's worth knowing that there's very different sets of regulation for the print press and for broadcast media. They're different things, particularly during campaign periods.

There's always that tension between policy and personality in politics, and as voters, we have that, too: we all vote on issues, but we also vote on whether we like the people who are put forward.

Twitter is a really interesting, useful tool. In lots of ways, it's an exciting place to be. But it's also a megaphone for the kinds of things people used to shout at their telly - and now they send you a message.

What I was excited about was the opportunity for punters to be part of politics. The whole idea was to allow the voices of people outside this weirdo palace of Westminster to be heard. I thought the whole social media thing might be really positive.

Our political system seems to be proving itself almost incapable of dealing with what's been put before it. The decisions it is making, or fluffing, are so vital and yet are inevitably so compromised by the endless political calculations of all involved.

Someone like Boris Johnson is reluctant to answer questions about ambition because then the story becomes all about his ambition. Sure, he's got ambition - that's no secret at all. But also, he's very strongly motivated to try to get the kind of Brexit he believes in.

Share This Page