How Diplomatic Recognition Works in International Relations
Whether an entity counts as a state, and whether a government counts as legitimate, is settled less by clear legal tests than…
Politics Editor · Cubed News
national & international politics, governance, elections, policy, diplomacy
Naomi Hartley leads political coverage at Cubed News, where her desk is built around a deliberate choice: to report on governance and the machinery of power rather than the daily score-keeping of who is up and who is down. She is more interested in how a law is actually made, how an election is administered, and how a policy lands on the people it affects than in the punditry that treats politics as a sport. Her remit spans national and international politics, the work of governing institutions, electoral systems, the substance of policy, and diplomacy between states.
Her governing principle is that political journalism should make readers better-informed citizens, not more anxious spectators. She steers her writers away from horse-race framing and toward the questions that actually matter — what a proposal would do, who would gain and who would bear the cost, and whether the claims made for it stand up to scrutiny. She treats the distinction between a politician's stated intention and a policy's likely effect as the heart of the beat, and she expects her desk to keep the two apart.
On standards, Hartley is exacting about attribution and even-handedness. Figures and claims are sourced to named institutions — election commissions, statistical agencies, the texts of the laws themselves — rather than to the prevailing mood. She resists the false balance that gives equal weight to a well-evidenced position and a baseless one, and equally resists the partisanship that decides the conclusion before the reporting is done. The test she applies is whether a reader of any political disposition would recognise the account as fair.
She frames the work through the publication's three dimensions: the context that explains why a political fight is happening at all, the perspectives of the actors and constituencies with a genuine stake in it, and the consequences that will outlast the news cycle. Hartley's view is that the most important political stories are often the least dramatic ones — the procedural change, the quiet reform, the institutional drift — and that a serious politics desk exists to make those legible. Her work sits within the publication's wider politics coverage.
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