Jagmeet Singh Needs Media Training
CPAC

Jagmeet Singh Needs Media Training

It's been quite the month for NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh and we're only halfway through September.

Last week he said his party won't support the Liberal government's carbon tax unless there are changes to it, and the week before he announced he was "ripping up" the agreement with Prime Minister Trudeau to support the government.

It was at the news conference to announce that decision that he refused to answer simple questions from reporters, showing why he needs more media training.

No Answers

A couple of weeks ago, Singh announced he was ripping up the deal he had with Prime Minister Trudeau that saw the NDP constantly voting with the Liberals in the House of Commons, in return for passing legislation the NDP wanted.

It was the height of politics. Trudeau’s minority government needed the NDP’s support or it would have been forced to call another election. The NDP got some of legislation through that it wanted. The Liberals had to hold their noses and do what Singh wanted, although I’m sure there were lengthy backroom negotiation sessions between the two.

When Singh faced reporters to explain why he had ended the agreement, he should have been ready for a number of obvious questions, including “Do you still have confidence in the Liberal government?” Toronto Sun columnist Brian Lilley wasn’t about to let him off the hook.

Weak, Evasive and Unprepared

I think politicians look weak, evasive and unprepared when they don’t answer obvious questions from reporters. It seems to be happening more often than it used to and there are probably several reasons for that.

When I do media training, I tell participants they need to answer questions from reporters. I would never go into a session telling anyone I was working with to totally ignore the question and simply give the answer they want to give. If a media trainer tells you to do that, ask for your money back.

My sense is Singh didn’t want to answer the question about confidence, because if he said he lacked confidence in the Liberal government, then a reporter would have asked him why he has supported the government for years. Singh’s reasoning for his decision was vague and that question would have taken him back to defending the decision.

There are ways of answering that question so he wouldn’t have looked evasive. Perhaps he wasn’t prepared for the question (he should have been), or figured if he kept repeating the same “ripped up the agreement” line he would get away with it.

It didn’t work. He looked weak.

It's Not Rocket Science

I think people expect politicians to answer reasonable questions from reporters. It’s part of the job and the media keeps them accountable.

Some politicians think the better choice is to answer with the answer they want to give, even if it doesn’t answer the question. It serves their purposes because the sound bite might make it on the TV news.

The public doesn’t really care about the answer, but doesn’t want to see politicians refuse to answer questions because it looks like they have something to hide.

My advice for anyone is, figure out the questions you’ll be asked in advance and how you’ll answer those questions. Those who are good at it find ways to answer questions and then get into the areas they want to. Most reporters will allow you do that, as long as you answer the question.

That’s why I always talk about the need to answer first and explain second. Give your answer right at the beginning and then move into the explanation that supports your answer.

The real startling thing about this is that most of the people I do media training for learn how to answer the questions better than a lot of veteran politicians.

Maybe Jagmeet Singh just needs more media training?It's Not Rocket Science

I think people expect politicians to answer reasonable questions from reporters. It’s part of the job and the media keeps them accountable.

Some politicians think the better choice is to answer with the answer they want to give, even if it doesn’t answer the question. It serves their purposes because the sound bite might make it on the TV news.

The public doesn’t really care about the answer, but doesn’t want to see politicians refuse to answer questions because it looks like they have something to hide.

My advice for anyone is, figure out the questions you’ll be asked in advance and how you’ll answer those questions. Those who are good at it find ways to answer questions and then get into the areas they want to. Most reporters will allow you do that, as long as you answer the question.

That’s why I always talk about the need to answer first and explain second. Give your answer right at the beginning and then move into the explanation that supports your answer.

The real startling thing about this is that most of the people I do media training for learn how to answer the questions better than a lot of veteran politicians.

Maybe Jagmeet Singh just needs more media training?

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Grant Ainsley的更多文章

  • They're Quitting, Not Retiring

    They're Quitting, Not Retiring

    A strange thing has been happening in the news media for the last few years. It seems nobody in a high-profile position…

    3 条评论
  • AI Thinks Like a Reporter

    AI Thinks Like a Reporter

    Last week I was doing the first of two days of media training sessions for a municipality when the issue of AI came up.…

    2 条评论
  • Media, Mistrust and Money

    Media, Mistrust and Money

    Mistrust in the news media has never been higher. It's easy to understand why because much of the news we see on…

  • Putting Lipstick on a Pig

    Putting Lipstick on a Pig

    The ink is hardly dry on the deal that sees Rogers Communications buying Bell Media's stake in Maple Leaf Sports and…

  • The Big Media Conspiracy Theory

    The Big Media Conspiracy Theory

    All summer I noticed a strange twist in social media, especially on X. Almost every day I saw people wondering why a…

  • The 5 Most Annoying Air Travellers

    The 5 Most Annoying Air Travellers

    Summer is here and that means people travelling everywhere. That will result in packed airports and planes, with…

    1 条评论
  • Is Local Journalism the Next Blockbuster?

    Is Local Journalism the Next Blockbuster?

    It was a bad week for journalism in Canada as Global announced the layoffs of dozens of local journalists and cuts to…

    8 条评论
  • Making Your Brand UltraBasic

    Making Your Brand UltraBasic

    WestJet used to be the darling of the Canadian airline industry. It's UltraBasic fare, which seems like a race to the…

    6 条评论
  • Why Regular People are Better Than Politicians

    Why Regular People are Better Than Politicians

    I conducted three media training workshops last week and was amazed at how well people did with their practice…

  • Why Do Politicians Refuse to Answer Questions?

    Why Do Politicians Refuse to Answer Questions?

    Some media trainers tell their clients to "Give the answer you want to give." I don't do that, because refusing to…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了