Julia Mary Langdon (born July 1946) is a British journalist and writer.
A political journalist since 1971, she became a lobby correspondent in 1974.[1] Leaving The Guardian in 1984, she was appointed political editor of the Daily Mirror, the first woman to hold the position on a national newspaper in the UK.[2] Later, Langdon was political editor of The Sunday Telegraph.[3] Having children, however, was one of the reasons she left the parliamentary lobby in the 1990s.[4]
Langdon has been a freelance writer since 1992, and has written a biography of the Labour politician Mo Mowlam (2000) and is writing a biography of former Prime Minister Gordon Brown. She has also worked as a broadcaster for the BBC. She presented a programme on BBC Radio 4 about the recruitment of female spies, which featured an interview with Eliza Manningham-Buller former head of The Security Service. In the programme Langdon revealed that she had been approached at school to work for the secret services.[5]
References
edit- ^ Julia Langdon "The lobby’s five wise monkeys" Archived 2011-07-17 at the Wayback Machine, Total Politics, 17 June 2009
- ^ Martin Conboy Journalism: a Critical History, London: Sage, 2004, p. 147
- ^ Julia Langdon "Major voice, minor key" Archived 2012-08-01 at archive.today, British Journalism Review, 18:1, 2007, p. 13–21
- ^ Merrick, Jane (22 July 2016). "Confessions of a female lobby correspondent". The Spectator. Retrieved 17 February 2017.
- ^ "BBC Radio 4 - I Work for the Government, and Let's Leave It at That".