Cartoonists on the media front line

Smiling man with short white hair, teal jumper and tweed jacket holding a green book.
Former BBC radio reporter Nick Jones at Leeds Playhouse on March 1 to launch his latest book about the miners’ strike that ended 40 years ago this month. (Photo: Tony Harcup)
Former BBC radio reporter Nick Jones was in Leeds to launch his latest book about the miners’ strike that ended 40 years ago.

Former BBC radio reporter Nick Jones was at Leeds Playhouse on March 1 to launch his latest book about the miners’ strike that ended 40 years ago this month.

“I’m half journalist and half squirrel,” said Nick, explaining how The Art of Class War came about.

“As the strike went on it moved from the picket front line to the media front line and became a propaganda
war. I used to cut out everything from the newspapers, including the cartoons. I have a vast archive that I have now given to Sheffield University, and as I went through the boxes what stood out were the cartoons.

“I thought we could tell the story of the strike through the tapestry of cartoons.”

Man pointing at a whiteboard.
Nick Jones makes a point about how press cartoonists covered the miners’ strike of 1984-85. (Photo: Tony Harcup)

Joining him at the Leeds event was Steve Bell (author of the book’s foreword), who reminisced about featuring the strike regularly in his own Guardian cartoon strip If…: “The great thing was the Grauniad just let me get on with it. Mind you, things have changed these days.”

The Art of Class War: Newspaper Cartoonists and the 1984-85 Miners’ Strike by Nicholas Jones (2025) is published by the Campaign for Press and Broadcasting Freedom (North), £10.

Two men sitting in front of a sign saying Campaign for Press and Broadcasting Freedom speaking to a man standing up in front of them.
Granville Williams of CPBF(North) and Steve Bell chatting to punters at the Leeds Playhouse book launch. (Photo: Tony Harcup)