Author Archives: Jimmy Burns

The Fox saga: Where was the civil service?

  No doubt there will be even  more damaging  revelations to come about the Liam Fox saga  but so far one area of potential responsibility appears to be missing from the focus of reporting. Just what was the civil service including the spooks doing  during all this period of paid freebies and meeting involving the Secretary of State for Defence’s  best man and unofficial adviser? Were any early warnings given and if so when and what? And if not why not? After all , what are legit and paid officials …

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Scotland vs Spain

Watching Scotland play Spain last night was a delight. I can’t think of a more genial bunch of fans than the Tartan Army. Two days on the Costa del Sol and they had won the hearts and minds of every local, with their harmless good cheer. No matter their players weren’t quite up to the standards of their hosts.  Spaniards joined in the Scots singing, and even tried to  liven up the bagpipe with some rhythmic flamenco clapping. Spain was quite simply beautiful to watch. This was a team that …

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Mixed messages from the FT

It was good to see my former colleague John Gapper devoting his FT New York column to a measured, but ultimately supportive piece about the Occupy Wall Street protest. Good too on the FT’s intrepid editor Lionel Barber for giving him the space. To those not familiar with the pink-un, it might come as something of a surprise that this international business paper, which looks to the world’s major corporations for some handy subscriptions and advertising, should have a piece praising the protest movement’s “popular democracy”, even while criticising its …

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Barca’s Unanswered questions

Nothing like having a belated ten day holiday  in Sitges to meditate on the affairs of FC Barcelona. This is after all the town/village, just down the coast from the Catalan capital,  where much of the creative talent behind the region’s great fortunes and modernism was developed. They say that long after los indianos –those who traded successfuly and built their palaces-painters and poets used to drink champagne watching the sunset and the sunrise. Here too resided once the likes of Bobby Robson and Jose Mourinho and Louis Van Gal and several …

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Pep Guardiola: Football’s Guru

Anyone expecting Pep Guardiola to make a bid for the presidency of Catalonia may have been disappointed by his speech to the Catalan parliament the other day, where he received a medal, honouring him or his professional work. Pep’s  short speech was short, articulate, and hugely inspirational. He was there to make clear the importance of  being passionate about what you do in life-however unimportant you think what you do is- , and to leave  us with no doubt that the one overriding passion in his life is football- playing it, …

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9/11: Ten years on

  The day the Twin towers were attacked I was with Tony Blair. I was in Brighton sent by the FT to cover the TUC annual conference. I have a vivid image of the PM and his entourage changing plans on the hoof and turning round from a speech he was due to give to trade unionists on New Labour’s latest reform agenda as the images came live on TV. He and his team rushed past me and a group of fellow journalists and headed back to London. Reflecting on that …

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Jimmy Burns – Barca: A People’s Passion

FC Barcelona is much more than a football club- it is a social and political phenomenon.


Jimmy Burns discusses Lionel Messi


Qatar and Barca

I  remember back in the summer of 2003 attending a press conference organised by the Elefant Blau during the FC Barcelona presidential election campaign at which the then candidate Joan Laporta sat side by side with his running mate Sandro Rosell. There was a sense of positive expectation. The Elefant Blau had made huge a huge advance on the collective consciousness of football fans worldwide as a grassroots movement that believed in democracy , transparency , and financial accountability. A new era was beckoning after decades during which Barca ‘s …

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Lourdes revisited (with thanks to Fr Nicholas King S.J.)

A week away from one’s daily existence seems all that much longer a break when it has been spent in Lourdes and I write this now while the experience is not only still fresh in my mind but also hopefully resistant to old habits settling in  again. Pilgrimage is a journey and a discovery, and how ever many times I return to this holy enclave in the foothills of the Pyrenees, the process endures- each trip providing both renewal and a fresh encounter in most unexpected ways. It is in …

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