Ex-BBC
boss leads calls for end to political appointments to board
Tony Hall
urges government to bolster BBC’s independence as MPs and union seek Robbie
Gibb’s removal from board
Michael
Savage Media editor
Fri 14
Nov 2025 18.09 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2025/nov/14/ex-bbc-boss-tony-hall-political-appointments-board
Tim
Davie’s predecessor as BBC director general is leading calls to end political
appointments to the broadcaster’s board amid concerns over the influence of
Robbie Gibb.
Tony Hall
said political involvement needed to be removed from appointing the members of
the board and its chair.
MPs,
staff members and the main BBC union have all called for Gibb – Theresa May’s
former communications chief, who has previously described himself as a “proper
Thatcherite Conservative” – to be removed from the board.
It
follows claims he has used his place on the BBC board and its editorial
standards body to put pressure on the corporation from within over alleged
liberal bias. Gibb was placed on the board by Boris Johnson’s administration.
BBC
sources have disputed that Gibb has disproportionate influence, noting he is
one of more than a dozen voices in board meetings.
Lord Hall
said upcoming talks over renewing the BBC’s charter were “a fantastic
opportunity for Lisa Nandy [the culture secretary] … to make some reforms that
remove as much politics as you can from the BBC”.
He told
the Guardian: “There’s always going to be politics, because it’s a big
organisation spending a lot of money – but she can take some of the obvious
politics out of it. Perception is often all and it’s the perception of someone
coming with their own political views which is the problem, whoever it might
be.”
Insiders
have claimed Gibb pushed bias accusations made in a memo by Michael Prescott, a
public relations executive and former independent external adviser to the BBC’s
editorial guidelines and standards committee (EGSC).
The memo
eventually led to the resignations of Davie and Deborah Turness, the head of
BBC News, after a difficult gathering of the board last Thursday. Some
potential candidates to replace Davie are said to be wary of the post because
of Gibb’s presence.
The
departures have left the BBC without a leader as it heads into crucial talks
with the government over the renewal of its charter.
Hall
urged Nandy to bolster the BBC’s independence in the face of political attacks
by putting its 10-year charter on a permanent footing. “The independence of the
BBC really matters,” he said. “It’s not a state broadcaster. It’s a public
broadcaster on behalf of all of us.
“If you
don’t renew the charter, the BBC comes to an end. It stops. It is no more. I
really hope that this government, who believe in the BBC, will say ‘we’ll give
it a charter for ever’ – and then find other ways of making the BBC
accountable.”
Nandy has
said she would examine scrapping political appointments to the broadcaster’s
board as part of charter renewal talks. She said political appointments had
“damaged confidence and trust in the BBC’s impartiality”.
The
Guardian understands that Gibb’s place on the EGSC allowed him to unilaterally
order research on issues that worried him. This has raised concerns that the
research enabled him to confront the broadcaster with a flow of claims of
liberal bias.
This is
disputed. It is understood that research was generally commissioned by the
whole committee, while editorial leaders were aware of research ordered by
Gibb. All research was eventually discussed by everyone. Gibb raised at least
one issue that suggested a rightwing bias, in a story on striking rail workers.
Urgent
changes are now being made to the EGSC, which featured five people. Three of
the five were Davie, Turness and Samir Shah, the BBC chair. The changes are
expected to dilute Gibb’s role.
Defenders
of Gibb say he wants to protect the BBC, that he did not want Davie to resign
and that he has backed the licence fee. Shah has dismissed claims of a
rightwing campaign to destabilise the BBC from within as fanciful.
The BBC
has acknowledged failings raised in Prescott’s memo but also rejected many of
the allegations of bias, pointing to action already being taken on many of the
concerns. It has vowed to review the issues he raised.
It
included criticism of the way Panorama broadcast edited footage of a Donald
Trump speech, which led the US president to threaten a $1bn legal action. The
BBC has apologised personally to the president but is still awaiting his
response to its decision to reject his legal threat’s assertion that the
programme was defamatory.
Bectu,
the biggest union in the BBC, joined calls for Gibb to be removed. Philippa
Childs, the union’s head, said: “The culture secretary has been very clear in
her support for the BBC and its independence. It is time for her to demonstrate
that by acting now to ensure the most impartial board possible for the
organisation – that means Robbie Gibb has to go.”

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