The trio open up to Radio Times about what sets their political podcast apart from the crowd.

By Caroline Frost

Published: Tuesday, 26 March 2024 at 10:01 AM


If it seems like we can’t move for political podcasts these days, Tory peer Ruth Davidson, Labour MP Jess Phillips and Sky News Political Editor Beth Rigby believe their offering Electoral Dysfunction nonetheless brings something brand new.

They tell Radio Times about navigating the party lines and why them all being chums is good for the electorate…

Aside from being an all-female line-up, how do you hope to stand out in a pretty crowded political podcast market?

JESS PHILLIPS: I think of all the podcasters I am the only one who is actually an elected politician, still, [with] the ability to actually be like, “That was nothing like that, I was in the room and it was very boring… I was playing Candy Crush on my phone and you’ve made it out to be the Night of Long Knives!” Or to get the genuine sense of exactly how people are feeling. This week it would be politicians going to Reform, or the racism row that seems to be breaking out; it’s all well and good looking at it from one perspective, but being there and seeing the people who are involved I think makes a massive difference.

RUTH DAVIDSON: A lot of the podcasts out there feel very Westminster-centric, and Jess and I try very much to be of the place we’re from. If you cut Jess in half, it would say Birmingham like rock. I’m very much of Scotland, so it’s not just that our accents are from outside the Westminster bubble, our experiences are and we go to London to do a job. We have lives outside of what we do and I think that gives us perspective.

JP: The bit of politics that is actually about the people, not Westminster, I think is often missing. No one in the country is chuffed by the National Insurance cut, they haven’t noticed and they don’t care. [Our podcast] is a link to the actual people.

So being an all-women lineup is immaterial?

RD: It just happens that we’re women. Neither Jess nor I in our political lives have traded on the fact that we’re women, we’ve just done our jobs to the best of our abilities in a way that we are our authentic selves, and it turns out that sometimes our authentic selves are a bit more authentic than some people were expecting!

Jess, you’re a serving Labour MP, and Ruth, you’re a Tory peer in the House of Lords. How truthful can you be with your audience if you need to be seen toeing the party line?

JP: Listeners will hear straight through lines being parroted out. At the moment, you’ve got to feel for ministers and shadow ministers going out and saying a line in the morning, and by the end of the day it’s no longer the line, as if viewers can’t tell what is happening. But if you’re honest and you say, “I’m not going to parrot the party line but I will defend it because…” name it for what it is, and people will tolerate it. But you also have to show the listener that you are willing to critique your own side, and both Ruth and I have.

RD: I have been criticised in my own party for being over-critical of Boris Johnson and despairing of Liz Truss. Actually with Rishi [Sunak], I have a huge amount of sympathy for the job he’s trying to do; he’s a serious man who works hard and is trying his best. But that doesn’t mean that I can’t say how… the man has a tin touch for politics. The politics of politics, like that is not his forte!

JP: We play the ball, not the man, so I will sit and say, “What the bloody hell…?” about Rwanda or whatever it is in the news that week. I’m obviously going to criticise the Tory Party, but we’re not nasty about it, because actually people don’t like the nastiness.

What is your role, Beth? As a political editor for a national broadcaster, do you have to make sure you are more neutral?

BETH RIGBY: I’m not going to be giving my own personal political opinions, but I do get to be a bit more myself [than on TV]. I can show a bit more of my personality, I can have fun, because they’re fun to be with.

When you’ve been doing political journalism for as long as I have, it’s trained into you to try to see all sides of a story of an argument. I’m more interested in what Jess and Ruth think. I don’t think what I think in that moment is relevant. I’m not the practitioner, I’m the conduit.

There were issues around Trump last week where, you know, I had to make sure that if something is said I give the counterpoint. They’re like Arsenal strikers and I’m like the umpire…

RD: Beth, you’re just betraying women who like football there because they’re not umpires in football, they’re referees!

JP: Because she is the political editor of Sky, it’s more difficult for her than it is for me, whereas every other interaction I’ve had with Beth Rigby, it was definitely more difficult for me than it was for her.