Paddy French
Paddy French (investigative reporter) | |
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In the 1970s, at the age of 23, Paddy French launched the Rebecca magazine in Wales, a radical publication that took its name from the Rebecca Riots of the 19th century.
The magazine’s reputation was based on a sustained critique of the Labour Party in Wales.
Many of the politicians and councillors exposed in its pages were later convicted of corruption.
In 1976, the Sunday Times called Paddy French ‘the scourge of the Welsh’.
French went on to freelance for the Sunday Times as well as working on corruption investigations for BBC Nationwide, Thames TV and the BBC 2 Man Alive series.
In the 1990s he was an independent producer who worked for Channel 4 Dispatches, BBC Wales and ITV Wales.
From the late 1990s until his retirement in 2009, he worked as a current affairs reporter and producer for HTV/ITV Wales, mainly on the long-running Wales This Week strand.
Upon retiring, he relaunched the Rebecca brand as a website, ‘Rebecca Television’, where he exposes wrongdoing in Welsh public life.
Paddy French also runs the Press Gang website, exposing rogue journalism. It is best known for its dramatic exposé revealing News of the World “Fake Sheikh” Mazher Mahmood lied to the Leveson Inquiry about the number of successful criminal prosecutions he’d secured.[1]
In 2019 he co-authored, with Professor Brian Cathcart, "Unmasked: Andrew Norfolk, The Times Newspaper And Anti-Muslim Reporting: A Case To Answer" (Unmasked Books). The Times published an editorial condemning French and Cathcart as “politically motivated campaigners … trying to smear and suppress fine reporting”.[2]
Paddy French joined the Labour Party after the 2017 manifesto "For The Many, Not The Few".[3]
A Document by Paddy French