The top 10 neighbors for UK Prime Minister form a tight, undifferentiated band — scores run from 0.94 down to 0.90 with no single dominant pull — and the composition is almost entirely news publishers and journalists, with a handful of politicians mixed in.
The shape is flat. BBC News (UK) leads at 0.94, followed closely by BBC Breaking News at 0.92. Neither stands out structurally; the gap between first and tenth place is less than four points. Of the ten neighbors, five carry the News Publishers subcategory: BBC News (UK), BBC Breaking News, The Daily Beast, Financial Times Best Of, and The Guardian. Three are Politicians: John Kerry at 0.91, Al Gore at 0.90, and Joan Walsh — though Walsh's subcategory is Journalists, not Politicians. Correcting that tally: Politicians are Kerry (0.91) and Gore (0.90); Journalists are Christiane Amanpour at 0.91 and Walsh at 0.90. The remaining neighbor is Digg at 0.90, a Website, and Clinton Foundation at 0.90, a Non-Profit — the only non-media, non-politician entries in the set.
No other Government entity appears in the top 10 alongside the center entity, which is itself classified as Government. The audience shape here is defined almost entirely by news-consumption and political-media habits rather than by proximity to other government accounts.
The flat, compressed band across these ten neighbors points to an audience that is broadly engaged with serious news and political commentary rather than organized around any single outlet or figure.