If you feel a cold draught in Fleet Street today, it is not the weather. It is the chill of public disaffection. A new report has confirmed what many of us have felt on the street: trust in news has collapsed to its lowest level on record. Only one in three Britons now say they trust the media to tell the truth. That is not a number. That is a verdict.
I have spent years watching the relationship between the press and the public deteriorate, like a marriage that forgot to keep talking. It started with the phone-hacking scandal, that raw wound that never quite healed. Then came the Brexit years, when every newspaper seemed to pick a side and hurl abuse at the other. Then the pandemic, when mixed messages turned into a fog of war. And now we are here, in a landscape where the word 'news' is more likely to evoke a sigh than a sense of curiosity.
The human cost of this collapse is hard to quantify but easy to see. It is the man in the pub who tells you he gets his information only from Facebook. It is the woman at the school gate who says she no longer knows what to believe. It is the young person scrolling TikTok, where a video from an anonymous stranger carries as much weight as a report from the BBC. We have become a nation of information hermits, each locked in our own algorithmic bubbles, mistrustful of anyone who claims to have the bigger picture.
And yet, the cultural shift runs deeper than mere scepticism. It is a fundamental questioning of the role of journalism itself. For decades, the press was a gatekeeper, a filter, a trusted intermediary between events and the public. Now, the gates are down. Anyone can publish, and everyone does. The result is a cacophony where authority is drowned out by volume. The very concept of objective truth has become a battleground.
Class dynamics play their part here, of course. The trust gap is widest among the working class and the young. For those who feel left behind by globalisation, the metropolitan media often seems like an enemy, a voice from a different world that speaks of things they do not recognise. The closure of local newspapers, the hollowing out of regional newsrooms, has left communities without a mirror. They look at national news and see a reflection of a country they do not live in.
What is to be done? The easy answer is transparency, but that is a buzzword, not a solution. The harder answer is humility. Journalism must stop lecturing and start listening. It must admit its mistakes, its biases, its failures. It must rebuild trust not through grand declarations but through small, consistent acts of honesty. It must go back to the streets, to the council estates, to the towns that have been forgotten. It must remember that its job is not to tell people what to think but to give them the tools to think for themselves.
This is not a crisis that will be solved by a new website or a better algorithm. It is a crisis of connection. And until the press relearns how to connect with the people it claims to serve, the cold draught will only grow colder.










