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Times ;-)
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Yes Anne....my two typing fingers don't always work very well !

So who did the Times send to do the first interview with Trump....John Humphrys ? Jeremy Paxton ? Andrew Neil ?

No....little Mikey Gove, of the Lower Forth !
Mikey, all that spinning is confusing you. This is the Guardian's version.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/jan/15/trumps-first-uk-post-election-interview-brexit-a-great-thing
I'm a bit confused here, why is Michael Gove there?
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Because he begged the Times to send him !

First it was Farage, then Gove....says a lot about Trump, doesn't it !
Mikey, //he begged the Times to send him !//

What are you talking about - and what does it say about Trump?
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The media are going to enjoy their 'novelty honeymoon' with the President Elect - once the White House Staffers get in between him and the media they like, such open access will rapidly be closed.
Mikey, you've posted the same link twice. That is not the Guardian's version. You really must learn the difference between a valid report and a piece of satirical nonsense - which is what that is.
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Thanks Ed.
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//Because he begged the Times to send him ! //

//First it was Farage, then Gove....says a lot about Trump, doesn't it//

If the first statement is true......how does that "say a lot" about Trump?

Haha some would rather believe the fantasy versions rather than face the truth. Mind you, I always treat everything that oozes out of the Guardian as fiction. Meanwhile as the world turns Labour continues to jump off the ride, confused by the dizzying effects.
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The truth Togo, is that the Times, once considered to be a fine newspaper, sent a toady in the form of Michael Gove to do the job of a proper journalist.
The Times is owned by Murdoch. Do I need to say more?
Can you explain what you mean by Toady?
Mikey, whatever your opinion that answer doesn't qualify your statement at 08:59.
Mikey - Mr Gove is a proper journalist - please see his Wki entry -

"Gove became a trainee reporter at the Press and Journal in Aberdeen, where he spent several months on strike in the 1989–1990 dispute over union recognition and representation.[20] He joined the The Times in 1996 as a leader writer and assumed posts as its comment editor, news editor, Saturday editor and assistant editor. He has also written a weekly column on politics and current affairs for the newspaper and contributed to The Times Literary Supplement, Prospect magazine and The Spectator. He remains on good terms with Rupert Murdoch,[3][21] whom Gove described in evidence before the Leveson Inquiry as "one of the most impressive and significant figures of the last 50 years".[22] He has also written a sympathetic biography of Michael Portillo and a critical study of the Northern Ireland peace process, The Price of Peace, for which he won the Charles Douglas-Home Prize.[18] He has worked for the BBC's Today programme, On The Record, Scottish Television and the Channel 4 current affairs programme A Stab in the Dark, alongside David Baddiel and Tracey MacLeod, and was a regular panellist on BBC Radio 4's The Moral Maze and Newsnight Review on BBC Two.[16][23][24]".
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Toady.....a person who behaves obsequiously to someone important.
synonyms: sycophant, obsequious person, creep, crawler, fawner, flatterer, flunkey, lackey, truckler, groveller, doormat, lickspittle, kowtower, minion, hanger-on, leech, puppet, stooge, spaniel, Uriah Heep;

Let me know if you need any more Jack !
But the Guardian sent.........no one. So they made an interview up, and some read it and apparently can't tell the difference.

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