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Election campaigns always produce a superstar or two. That was certainly the case this time around, with the likes of Chief Secretary to the Treasury Rishi Sunak and Labour’s Shadow Business
Secretary Rebecca Long-Bailey coming to the fore via high-profile media appearances. It’s not always about bright new things though. Sometimes old stars re-emerge as well. We saw that in
2019 too. However, it wasn’t a politician, but local media that reasserted itself. Local newspapers, and indeed radio, have long been vital and much loved. In this general election, local
and regional newspapers did a fantastic job of highlighting key issues for their readers, and often influenced the national conversation. Perhaps the best example of this was the _Yorkshire
Evening Post_. The paper’s front-page splash of a young child sleeping on the A&E department floor at Leeds General Infirmary was a devastating image. It focused the election debate on
the future of the NHS and the current issues facing much of the system. The _Post_’s story resulted in one of Boris Johnson’s most awkward moments of the campaign, when he refused to look at
the picture on an ITV reporter’s phone. The Health Secretary Matt Hancock was dispatched to the hospital to clear things up. When the veracity of that picture was questioned, the paper
fought back. Its editor, James Mitchinson, published a warning against the rise of fake news. In an open letter to a reader who had seen a post on Facebook that claimed the incident was a
set-up, Mitchinson wrote: “We went to great lengths to establish the story was true and to check that the hospital accepted as much. I do not blame you for contacting me as you have done.
You are not the only one to have seen the Sheree Jenner-Hepburn Facebook post — amongst thousands of others very similar in nature — and believed it to be true.” Mitchinson noted that the
Facebook account spreading the inaccurate information had been deleted. “Do not believe a stranger on social media who disappears into the night,” he warned. Across the Pennines, the
_Manchester Evening News_ was doing a similarly sterling job. In particular, Politics and Investigations Editor Jennifer Williams published a number of stories that gave an invaluable
insight into issues facing the Greater Manchester area. Through her reporting, Williams has deservedly risen to some prominence and brought the coverage of her region to national
publications like _Prospect_, for whom she wrote about Oldham. Furthermore, publications aimed at certain minority communities also have a prominent voice. The _Jewish Chronicle_ and _Jewish
News_ have consistently published hard-hitting stories highlighting the issue of anti-Semitism within Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour party. This culminated in a very dramatic _Chronicle_ front page
in which the paper urged non-Jewish voters to reject Corbyn and his party for its failure to tackle the issue. We can never know for sure how many people their stories influenced at the
ballot box. However, Labour’s near-total abandonment by the Jewish community, and the outpouring of disgust at Labour’s anti-Semitism from all parts of British society, cannot simply be put
down to coincidence. The _Voice_, a publication that speaks for the black community, has been highly influential. Its coverage of the 2018 Windrush scandal was especially powerful. The
episode cost the Home Secretary Amber Rudd her job. It also recently published an investigation outlining the “racially charged” disinformation that the likes of Diane Abbott and David Lammy
experience. Only publications with the focus of the _Voice _have the capacity and knowledge to do work like this. All this is great if an outlet can sustain and retain journalists of
calibre. For many, the drying-up of advertising revenue has proven crippling. The dominance of BBC local news websites has surely not helped either. Earlier this month, Newsquest, a major
publisher of local news, removed a number of editorial roles from its titles in Cumbria. There were also job cuts at some of its Scottish titles, and further reductions were only called off
in the face of threatened strike action. Previously, starting at your local paper was a matter of pride for journalists — a key step on the career ladder. However, this has become
increasingly rare as opportunities have dwindled. As Jim Waterson noted in the _Guardian_ back in March: “Over the last decade outlets have been merged, staff laid off and physical offices
are increasingly being closed in a final effort to cut costs. The end result often leaves a single junior reporter trying to fill an entire town’s newspaper, meaning they are inevitably
reliant on press releases and material provided by the authorities.” Recent months, not least the election, have proved what a vital role these publications still have to play, and how
crucial they are for our democracy.