Iain Dale (born 15 July 1962) is a British broadcaster, author, political commentator, and a former publisher and book retailer. He has been a blogger since 2002. He was the publisher of the Total Politics magazine between 2008 and 2012, and the managing director of Biteback Publishing until May 2018.[1] Since September 2010, he has hosted a regular discussion show on the radio station LBC. He was named Radio Presenter of the Year at the Arqiva Commercial Radio Awards in 2013[2] and 2016.[3] On 28 May 2024, he announced that he was quitting his LBC roles to run as an MP in the 2024 United Kingdom general election,[4][5] only to abandon his campaign three days later.[6] He returned to his usual LBC slot on 3 June.
Early life and education
Dale was born in Cambridge and grew up in Essex, where he attended Ashdon County Primary School and Saffron Walden County High School. After a gap year in which he worked as a nursing assistant at the Werner Wicker Klinik in West Germany, he read German, linguistics and teaching English as a foreign language at the University of East Anglia; his course included a year in which he taught English at the gymnasium in Besigheim. He was awarded an upper second class honours BA in 1985.[7]
Career
Early roles
Dale was a research assistant to the ConservativeMember of ParliamentPatrick Thompson (1985–87), the public affairs manager for the British Ports Federation (1987–89), a financial journalist with Lloyd's List (1989–90) and then the deputy managing director of the Waterfront Partnership and the managing director of the Waterfront Conference Company (1990–96).
Between 2006 and 2013, Dale wrote a weekly diary column for the Eastern Daily Press. In December 2018, it was announced that he would contribute a new weekly column to both the Eastern Daily Press and its Archant stablemate, the East Anglian Daily Times.
Dale has written or edited 46 political books. This includes co-authoring, in May 2006, a book with fellow blogger Paul Staines (responsible for the Guido Fawkes website) about alleged instances of sleaze from the Labour government since it took office in 1997.[8] A second edition was published in June 2007.[9]
Dale has written histories of West Ham United and Norwich City football clubs for Haynes Publishing, and in 2015, wrote a book called The NHS: Things That Need to be Said for Elliott & Thompson. His most recent book was co-edited by the former Labour Home SecretaryJacqui Smith, and is a collection of biographical essays of every female MP elected to the House of Commons since 1918 entitled Honourable Ladies. A second volume was published in 2019.
Dale was a stand-in presenter for the London radio station LBC 97.3 during the first nine months of 2010 after doing a couple of test programmes with other journalists. With Gaby Hinsliff, he co-presented LBC's six-hour election night programme on 7 May 2010. In May and June 2010, he presented the Petrie Hosken, Clive Bull, James Max and Jeni Barnett phone-in shows, and on 22 June 2010 fronted LBC's budget coverage.
In late July 2010, Dale started a six-week stint on LBC covering for Petrie Hosken and Andrew Pierce, which later turned into a regular show. Dale was the weekly evening presenter on LBC from 7 to 10pm until March 2013, when Clive Bull took over. Dale instead replaced broadcaster James Whale as the presenter of the Drivetime show between 4pm and 7pm Monday to Friday. He continued to present the station's Sunday Politics show between 10am and 1pm each weekend for a further few weeks in March 2013 until Andrew Gilligan took over. On 3 September 2018, LBC changed their autumn schedule: Dale moved to the evening show (7–10pm).
Dale formerly presented Planet Politics on Oneword Radio. He was also the chief presenter on the failed internet TV station 18 Doughty Street.
Dale was shortlisted for Speech Radio Programme of the Year at the 2013 Sony Radio Academy Awards, and then went on to win Radio Presenter of the Year at the 2013 and 2016 Arqiva Commercial Radio Awards. He won a Silver Sony for Interview of the Year at the 2014 Sony Awards[10] for his interview with James from Woolwich, who was an eyewitness to the murder of Lee Rigby.
Dale currently co-hosts a weekly political and current affairs podcast, entitled For The Many, alongside Jacqui Smith.
During the 2024 European Football Championship final, Dale twitted that whilst every English player was singing the national anthem, all Spanish players remained silent as the Marcha Real was played, attributing it to a lack of patriotism. The Spanish anthem does not have lyrics.[11]
Blogging
Dale wrote a blog titled Iain Dale's Diary. It was nominated by The Guardian for the Political Blog of the Year Award in 2005.[12]
In July 2011, Dale started a collaborative blog site, Dale & Co, with many contributors from the political spectrum, including himself. He continues to author a blog entitled West Ham Till I Die, in which he writes on West Ham United.[13]
Dale wrote a weekly diary column for the website ConservativeHome until 2021,[14][15] where he also published his annual list of the '100 most influential people on the Right' through to 2018.[16]
Retailing and publishing
In 1997, Dale opened Politico's Bookstore and Coffee House in Westminster, selling political books, memorabilia and novelty items. The shop spawned sister publishing and web design businesses that shared the Politico's brand. In 1998, he expanded his operation with the creation of a publishing division, Politico's Publishing, which he sold to Methuen Publishing in 2003. In 2004, he announced the closure of his bricks-and-mortar outlet and relocated his business to Kent as a mail-order operation. Later that year, Methuen re-opened his former premises as the Westminster Bookshop.
In 2006, Dale sold his Politico's Bookstore business to Harriman House. In 2012, he relaunched Politico's online as part of his Biteback Publishing business. He was also the publisher of Total Politics magazine from June 2008 until its sale to Dods (Group) PLC in December 2012.[1]
In August 2006, it was confirmed that Dale had been added to the Conservative A-List of candidates to fight the next general election.[18] He unsuccessfully applied for the Conservative candidacy for the safe seatMaidstone and The Weald.[19]
On 17 June 2010, Dale announced on his blog that he was resigning from the Conservative Party candidates list and would not be standing at any forthcoming parliamentary election.[21] On 14 December 2010, Dale announced that he was quitting both blogging at Iain Dale's Diary and party politics.[22][23]
On 28 May 2024, Dale announced that he would be stepping back from his LBC radio show to run as a Conservative candidate in the 2024 general election,[5] hoping to stand in the seat of Tunbridge Wells, where he lives.[25] On 31 May he announced that he had decided not to put his name on the shortlist after comments he had made about Tunbridge Wells, two years earlier, emerged online. In the clip he said that he didn't like living in the town he was running in.[26][27] Dale defended himself by stating that "there is a context to it, but nobody’s interested in context or nuance in these situations".[28] On 12 September in an interview with The TImes he said of the remarks: "I’ve had no pushback at all [from people in Tunbridge Wells]. People have said, “Who hasn’t slagged off where they live?” But I felt a sense of humiliation. Still do."[29]
On 24 September 2013, Dale became involved in a scuffle with Manchester pensioner Stuart Holmes, an anti-nuclear protester, on the Brighton seafront.[31] Holmes' placard had appeared on-screen behind Damian McBride, during an interview with McBride on breakfast television, coinciding with the Labour Party annual conference there.[32] McBride, a former special advisor to Gordon Brown, is one of Dale's authors at Biteback Publishing. Dale, who was not involved in the television interview, attempted to physically remove Holmes from the shot, resulting in the two men grappling on the ground. On 26 September, Dale accepted a police caution for the assault.[33] Sussex Police had interviewed both men about the incident.[34]
Dale subsequently posted an apology "to Mr Holmes, Mr Miliband [then-Labour Party leader], the Police, my family, friends and colleagues".[35]
^Crick, Micheal (28 May 2024). "Twitter". X (formerly Twitter). Retrieved 28 May 2024. apparwntly[sic] he's hoping to contest the selection in Tunbridge Wells on Friday