- It contained "flaws."
- It functioned to "mislead readers."
- It was written by a "partisan" pro-Labour activist.
- He called it a "misjudgment" that contained a "significant error."
- The story had been offered to Buzzfeed first and rejected.
- And "neither Corbyn nor Virgin Trains was contacted pre-publication to check."
The video of Jeremy Corbyn sitting on the floor of a train, disclosed exclusively online on 16 August, was mistakenly treated by the Guardian more as freelance journalism than what it actually was: a kind of gonzo news release by two Corbyn supporters.
The story dominated headlines in the
Almost immediately, the story began to unravel.
Readers pointed out that, in the video, Corbyn appeared to walk past empty seats. The story omitted to say that Corbyn had found a seat about 45 minutes into the journey, and that he was actually looking for a pair of seats so he could sit with his wife. Finally, Virgin trains owner Richard Branson released CCTV footage showing Corbyn walking past empty, unreserved seats on the train.
Chadwick's investigation also showed that the two authors of the story were Labour activists, not objective reporters. Freelancer Yannis Mendez was being paid by the Corbyn leadership election campaign, and "Charles B Anthony" was a fake name for his friend Anthony Casey, who "is a passionate Corbyn supporter."