Inside Story: Politics, Intrigue and Treachery from Thatcher to Brexit. Philip Webster

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to organize it. Evans took advice from experts and we formed a syndicate – headed by Wilson and including Tom Clarke (the sports editor), the new recruit Oakley, me, Richard, John Young (agriculture correspondent), Marcel Berlins (legal correspondent) and John Jinks (news editor).

      We opted to buy a horse that was in training with Simon Christian at Lambourn. We came up with the name Sunday for Monday – a newspaper term for a story that has been saved up for the weekend to make a splash in Monday’s paper – for this nag that was to carry the hopes of The Times for the next few years. The silks were deliberately chosen to be black and white and re(a)d – like a newspaper.

      Sunday for Monday was not the greatest piece of horseflesh to grace the tracks of Britain. In fact, it turned out to have a propensity to burst blood vessels when travelling at speed, which is not a helpful attribute for a horse that you want to run as fast as possible. The dear old thing gave us a few places in races with small fields but it was clear there was no danger of any of us getting rich on this one. After eighteen months, the horse was moved to a new trainer, Ron Hodges in Somerset, who swiftly told us the animal was a ‘bleeder’ – slightly more polite than some of the epithets we had thrown at it in the previous months – and would never win a race. The last I heard of Sunday for Monday was that it had become a point-to-point racer in Norway. Thereafter it may not have had a happy end.

      Hodges persuaded many of the syndicate to stick with him, and the result was that a much more successful beast by the name of Northern Saddler carried the Times colours. As is the way with these volatile animals, it took some time to work out what the horse really preferred in terms of length of journey and going of course. The answer was two miles maximum and mud – once that was established, he went on to rack up a string of wins running into double figures. He loved Newton Abbott, with Richard Dunwoody on board.

      The last syndicate horse we had was called Keshya, less successful than the second but more than the first. I remember representing the syndicate in its last race for us at Yarmouth in Norfolk when we had put it in a selling race – i.e. we were getting rid of it. We had the champion jockey Jamie Spencer on board and I had the honour of meeting up with him in the parade ring. He sounded confident, so the watching Webster family and friends went off to back him. He came in second. It was the end of a happy racing career for The Times syndicate. None of us made any money but it was a lot of fun.

      And it helped to keep The Times together.

       The Lobby Lunch

      Every weekday within a square mile or so of Westminster, small groups of highly committed individuals meet in supposed secrecy at the best restaurants of the day. Usually just before 1p.m., one, two or even three political correspondents will gather at their table and plan the tactics that will play out over the next hour or so.

      A few minutes later their guest – a government minister, senior opposition figure, or a powerful political aide – will rush in. Sometimes they look around nervously, hoping no one recognizes them; others, the attention-cravers, look around rather hoping that colleagues or friends will notice that they are about to eat with the political personnel from, say, The Times and the Mail.

      This is the Lobby lunch, an institution that is a central part of the discourse between press and politicians. The Lobby is the collective name given to journalists who are accredited to work in Parliament and attend Downing Street briefings, as well as visiting parts of the building such as the Members’ Lobby just outside the chamber to which mere mortals are denied access. Just as in the Members’ Lobby, information passed to reporters at lunch or dinner is not attributed to the source directly unless the source asks that it should be. The Lobby system, about which I write later, is the code under which politicians and press interact.

      Most of the national newspaper political correspondents are in what they call their Lobby lunch groups. On becoming a member of the Lobby, your boss advises you to join a lunch group or find a colleague of similar experience to set up your own. The rule of thumb tends to be that the more senior the group, the more senior the minister they seek to take out. That is no great disadvantage to the more junior members of the Lobby; in my lengthy experience, I found it was the newcomers to the Government or Opposition front-bench who were more likely to ‘sing for their supper’, as we put it.

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