Adam Raphael - Career

Career

Raphael undertook national Service with the Royal Artillery, commissioned as a second lieutenant on 1 June 1957, serving with the regular army until 1958 when he switched to the Territorial Army. He was promoted lieutenant on 25 January 1959, and completed his service in 1962. He became a copy boy at the Washington Post in 1961, worked on the Swindon Evening Advertiser from 1962 to 1963, then as film critic of the Bath Evening Chronicle from 1963 to 1964.

In 1965, he arrived in Fleet Street as a reporter on The Guardian, then was the newspaper's motoring correspondent from 1967 to 1968 before serving overseas as its foreign correspondent in Washington, D.C., and South Africa from 1969 to 1973. On his return to London, he was The Guardian's consumer affairs columnist from 1974 to 1976, before moving to The Observer as political correspondent, 1976-1981, and as political editor, 1981-1986.

In 1984 and 1989, The Observer printed articles by Raphael which suggested that the lobbyist Ian Greer had been paying members of parliament to table parliamentary questions, an early stage of the Cash for Questions scandal.

In 1987, Raphael moved to BBC Television, first as a presenter of its daily current affairs programme, Newsnight (1987-1988), then briefly in 1988 as an assistant Editor, before serving as Newsnight's Executive Editor from 1988 to 1993.

In March 1989, The Observer published an article by Raphael which claimed that British Aerospace was selling Tornado aircraft to Jordan at inflated prices to include the cost of bribes. At the time, The Guardian was seeking to undermine the ownership of The Observer by Tiny Rowland's Lonrho, and Raphael's colleague David Leigh complained to the directors of The Observer that the story was untrue and that Raphael had written it to suit Lonrho, which had a stake in British Aerospace's rival, Dassault Aviation. The MP Dale Campbell-Savours tabled motions in the House of Commons denouncing the article. The directors of The Observer dismissed Leigh's complaint, and he resigned from the newspaper, but in reporting the affair The Guardian gave the impression that the story had indeed been untrue, thus smearing Raphael.

In 1989, Raphael published a book on some libel cases, My Learned Friends: an Insider's View of the Jeffrey Archer Case and Other Notorious Actions, which focussed on the remarkable case of Jeffrey Archer v. The Daily Star (1987).

In 1994, he returned to The Observer as a writer on home affairs, then went to The Economist as political correspondent, 1994 to 2004. Among many influential articles Raphael has published in The Economist is Theft: Sitting on Fence, which helped to popularise the Market Reduction Approach to theft - designed by Mike Sutton (criminologist)- and revealed to the wider public the role of stolen goods markets in creating a demand for supply by theft and that the size of the stolen goods economy in Britain was £1.5 billion ($2.4 billion) annually.

In 1994, Raphael's book Ultimate Risk, the story of the Lloyd's of London catastrophe, became a bestseller in the UK. Between 1988 and 1992 Lloyd's recorded losses of some twelve billion US dollars, and Raphael wrote that it thus managed to "pauperize, if not bankrupt, as many as two in five of those who provided the market's capital." Raphael was himself a Lloyd's Name, and was thus able to write as an insider, one of the victims of the affair.

In 1999, Raphael wrote an article in The Economist about Jeffrey Archer's 1987 libel action against the Daily Star which raised new questions about where Archer had been on the key dates. He claimed that Archer had asked him to forget a conversation about the case and had asked him to change evidence he was about to give to the 1987 libel trial. Archer's spokesman Stephan Shakespeare replied "We are in an atmosphere where you can say whatever you like about Jeffrey Archer and it will be believed."

In 2001, Raphael's knowledge of the Archer libel case became critical when Archer was tried for perjury. Raphael had decided he would not reveal a source at the trial, and told Archer so, but he also warned Archer that he would reveal his source if Archer gave false evidence, which he went on to do. Subsequently, The Mail on Sunday had to pay damages to Raphael and The Observer after an editorial by Stewart Steven attacked Raphael for revealing the source. After Archer was jailed in 2001, Steven continued to insist that Raphael had "got it wrong". In his view, journalists facing a subpoena should be prepared to go to jail to protect their sources. Raphael replied that Steven was the kind of powerful ally who had protected Archer, adding (in an editorial in The Observer) "This attack on me by one of Archer's media allies was not just defamatory but also a contempt of court".

Raphael has been Editor of The Good Hotel Guide since 2004 and also an Associate Editor of Transport Times since 2005.

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