Johnsons communications team has banned ministers from appearing on BBC Radio 4s Today programme, boycotted ITVs Good Morning Britain, and declined to appear on Channel 4 since before the election.
Ministers have also been told not to have lunch with political journalists, and it was briefed at the weekend that Dominic Cummings, Johnsons senior adviser, had established a network of spies to find out whether other special advisers were fraternising with the media.
The BBC in particular is braced for a coming battle with the government after Johnson signalled during the election that he would consider scrapping the licence fee. A thinktank run by Cummings in 2004 advocated an end to the BBCs funding model and described it as a mortal enemy of the Tory party.
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Some of Johnsons recent hires as special advisers include those with specialisms in film production and photography, prompting speculation that he is increasingly intending to bypass the media. The prime minister has recently launched so-called peoples PMQs sessions in which he reads out pre-vetted questions and answers them himself in an attempt to speak directly to the public.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2020/feb/03/political-journalists-boycott-no-10-briefing-after-reporter-ban
I knew Johnson was personally boycotting the Today programme, but didn't realise how wide the ban was, not only on other programmes, but for ministers in general. This really does sound like Cummings is setting up Pravda-on-the-Thames.