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The more I trawl through the Google results for "jo moore" and "martin sixsmith" the more I realise how difficult this story is to do justice to in a succinct article. It's all rumour and misinformation and innuendo and generally as clear as mud and I have a headache now. --rbrwrˆ
In brief - she was a spin doctor and did exactly what a spin doctor is supposed to do. Why this is a surprise to anyone is a mystery. --Bonalaw15:24, 20 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This article is factually inaccurate. How could Jo Moore work for the Labour Party in the early 1980s? When she was a teenager? Get a grip. Stick to the facts —The preceding unsigned comment was added by81.1.76.157 (talk • contribs) --rbrwr± 3 July 2005 08:30 (UTC).
Well, if you know the facts, be bold and fix it. It does seem to be slightly inconsistent, though - if she was born in 1963 and was a graduate when she started working for the Labour Party, it is unlikely to have been before about 1984 or '85 which would be mid- rather than early 1980s. --rbrwr± 3 July 2005 08:30 (UTC)
There is nothing unusual about teenagers getting a job, even in politics, especially if their family has political connections. "The early eighties" could even include 1983 when she was no longer a teenager. Wmck (talk)
The article seems to fizzle out towards the end - it doesn't say what happened to Moore as a consequence of the email. According to The Times today she went on to leave the government and retrain as a teacher, but the article doesn't mention this. -Ashley Pomeroy (talk) 08:22, 8 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]