Isabel Hardman

Isabel Hardman

Hardman chairing a Policy Exchange debate, September 2014
Born May 1986 (age 30)
Camden, London, England
Nationality British
Occupation Journalist
Known for Assistant editor The Spectator

Isabel Hardman (born May 1986) is a political journalist and the assistant editor of The Spectator. In 2015, she was named "Journalist of the Year" at the Political Studies Association's annual awards.

Early life and education

Isabel Hardman was born in May 1986. She is the daughter of Michael Hardman, the first chairman and one of the four founders of the Campaign for Real Ale.[1] She attended St Catherine's School, Bramley, and Godalming College, before graduating from the University of Exeter with a first class degree in English Literature in 2007.[2][3] While at university, Hardman worked as a freelance journalist for The Observer.[4] She completed a National Council for the Training of Journalists course at Highbury College in 2009.[3]

Career

Hardman began her career in journalism as a senior reporter for Inside Housing magazine. She then became assistant news editor at PoliticsHome. In September 2014, GQ magazine named her as one of their 100 most connected women in Britain,[2] and in December 2015, she was named "Journalist of the Year" at the Political Studies Association's annual awards.[5] She is currently the assistant editor of The Spectator,[6] and writes a weekly column for The Daily Telegraph.[7]

She has appeared on television, in programmes such as Question Time, This Week[8] and The Andrew Marr Show, and is a presenter of the BBC Radio 4 programme Week in Westminster.[2]

In April 2016, Hardman tweeted that a male member of Parliament had referred to her as "the totty", a term generally regarded as sexist and demeaning, and that she had reported him to the whips but that she was not intending to name the man.[9] The member in question was subsequently reported to be the Conservative MP Bob Stewart.[10]

In July that year, Hardman was caught up in a terrorist attack in the French city of Nice. Interviewed afterwards, she said she had been walking back from watching a seaside fireworks display when the attack on the Promenade des Anglais occurred. "Suddenly there was sort of shouts and people started running away from the main square and there was screaming and then suddenly lots of sirens started up and there were police cars and ambulances whizzing past".[11]

Hardman has written about suffering from depression, and in October 2016 wrote that she had decided to stop working temporarily due to anxiety and depression problems.[12]

References

External links

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