Alexander wrote:Hoey's article is very good; her weak dementi however sounds not credible. It a typical case of: "I am glad we fixed it immediately, and (!) it has never happened, and nobody thus wants to be responsible."
Alexander
You're saying you believe everything you read in the papers? That's as dangerous as believing everything they say in Parliament.
There was one report, and one report only - from the Evening Standard (who have a record of defending their stories and claims if they are actually defensible).
I was always sceptical (see my post on page 1). Had there been an actual announcement or release from LOCOG, I would have expected to see it reported in at least one more place. A single source cannot be considered to be entirely reliable. But there was nothing. Not on BBC News, BBC Sport, nor even a little tucked away story from the Times, Telegraph or any other paper. Noone anywhere knew anything about this supposed embargo on shooting tickets.
EVERY SINGLE REPORT on the supposed ban was a repost of the original Evening Standard article.
Further to that, there were no actual quotes from anyone who actually had anything to do with it. Just shooters and anti-gun lobbyists
responding to the story, whom presumably had been called by the Evening Standard journalist and told "Are you aware that they've exempted shooting events from the Ticketshare programme?". Nowhere is a politician, or Boris, or a LOCOG spokesperson actually quoted.
Now unusually amongst politicians, I trust Kate Hoey. She does what is right for her constituents, and what is right for common sense. She has no compunction about rebelling against the party line (which she actually did rather frequently when her party were in power). She is up to her neck in the shooting sports and country activities.
If she says this was bad reporting, I am inclined to beieve her. The story always had limited credibility to start with.