My point about quote and counter-quote is a simple one to acknowledge, but you seem to just see what you want to see. Objective? I think not.
Well no. As someone who didn't vote for any major political party, I will look at the policies each time. This time round, I couldn't align myself with any main party enough to give them my vote, so voted for an Independent centrist candidate.
I think that the campaign run by the Conservatives was the worst, most inept one I can recall. I also think that the way social media was used by them failed to understand the impact it can have and alienated the youth vote, driving them into Labour's hands. Someone really should teach them how the digital world works.
I think the campaign run by Labour was utterly abhorrent - orchestrated character assassinations via social media, combined with promises that they couldn't possibly deliver on, all 'paid for' by criminalising the wealthy. Corbyn could have distanced himself from the more hate-fuelled elements of it, but not a sound.
I think the Lib Dems proved themselves not even worthy of being a protest party any more, given the divide over the EU and that even with that, they couldn't secure more votes.
UKIP are dead in the water. And that's a really good thing.
Greens can't shake off the 'tree-hugger' image enough to be relevant to anyone with a proper job, house, and understanding on how the world actually works.
So I have no affiliations. I see good and bad (mostly bad) on all sides of the spectrum. With regard to how the BBC reports politics (either deliberately, by default, or by accident) there's a left-leaning side to it. There simply is. Just as the Mail and Sun are right-leaning, the Mirror and Guardian are left-leaning, Fox is stupidly Republican, CNN is Democrat, etc. etc.
I know that the charter demands impartiality. I agree that the BBC will always strive for this. I just don't think they have been doing that well in achieving it.