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Steve Platt (born 1954)[1] is a British journalist who was editor of New Statesman and Society magazine 1991–1996.

Platt studied geography at the London School of Economics, edited Shelter's housing magazine Roof, and was an activist in the squatting movement.[2] In the 1980s he and two others ran a short life housing organisation, Islington Community Housing, in north-east London.[3]

The fortnightly Statesman column by John Pilger began in 1991, while Platt was editor, after the two men had worked together on media campaigns against the First Gulf war.[4] Platt, "while not securing a spectacular turnaround in the merged New Statesman & Society's fortunes... made it once again readable".[5] Platt was described as "a propagandist, using New Statesman & Society as a platform for various campaigns against executive abuse of state power", and was credited for bringing stability to it by staying with it, remaking it in a September 1994 into "a much glossier magazine with the self-proclaimed 'new politics' of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown".[5] Platt later wrote for Red Pepper magazine.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Anning, Nick; et al. (1980). Squatting the real story (PDF). p. 240. ISBN 0-9507259-1-9.
  2. ^ "A dissenting tradition: The New Statesman and the left". New Statesman. 20 May 2013.
  3. ^ Bowman, Anna (2003). Interim Spaces: Reshaping London – the role of short life property – 1970 to 2000 (PDF) (PhD thesis). University of Bristol. p. 267.
  4. ^ a b John Pilger and Steve Platt, "Beyond the dross", Red Pepper, July 2010.
  5. ^ a b Adrian Smith, 'New Statesman': Portrait of a Political Weekly 1913–1931 (2014), p. 3.
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Media offices
Preceded by Editor of New Statesman and Society
1991–1996
Succeeded byas editor of New Statesman