‘Make no
mistake – this was a coup’: the extraordinary downfall of the BBC’s top bosses
Michael
Savage Media editor
Mon 10
Nov 2025 18.57 GMT
When
Deborah Turness, the now departed BBC News chief, was first invited to a
meeting with the corporation’s board a few weeks ago, there was little to
suggest it would be a particularly significant encounter.
But
instead of a routine meeting, she came under attack over an item added to the
agenda.
The
lengthy confrontation that followed set off an extraordinary series of events
that ultimately ended in her resignation and that of the BBC director general,
Tim Davie – and raised questions about politically motivated interference with
the corporation’s news operation.
The board
wanted to discuss a letter – and accompanying 8,000-word memo – it had received
from Michael Prescott, a former external adviser to the BBC’s editorial
guidelines and standards committee (EGSC), who was making broad claims of bias
at the organisation.
The
claims, which would later be leaked to the Telegraph and reported prominently
over a week, had been sent to the board’s chair, Samir Shah, and the rest of
its members.
There
were some serious accusations in the claims made by Prescott, once the
political editor of the Rupert Murdoch-owned Sunday Times.
Most
notably, he described how Panorama had edited together two parts of a Donald
Trump speech without informing viewers. Other accusations were made over its
reporting on Gaza and trans rights.
However,
the criticisms were all made from the same political perspective: that the
BBC’s reporting on such issues was too liberal and that it had ignored such
concerns. Sources said that at the meeting, Turness was “on the rack” for more
than an hour as Prescott’s criticisms were laid out.
“Make no
mistake, this was a coup,” said a BBC source.
The
Guardian has been told the board member that “led the charge” over the letter’s
claims was Robbie Gibb, Theresa May’s former communications chief who also
helped to found the rightwing news channel GB News.
Sources
said Gibb, who has been accused of interfering in stories where he perceives
the editorial line to be left-leaning or “woke”, was “pointed” in his
criticisms.
Last
Thursday, after the Telegraph published its story, more pressure was applied on
Turness over Prescott’s allegations, at a second board meeting as members
attempted to thrash out exactly what to say in response to the letter.
While
Gibb was not the only voice pressing the board’s concerns over Prescott’s
claims at the meetings, insiders said the board’s lack of editorial expertise
meant he had “a lot of oxygen in the room”.
Some
newer members agreed with Gibb, who had held the post for four years. To
compound things, a board member who was supportive of the BBC’s editorial
efforts was away. Others felt they were not qualified to intervene. “Robbie and
his acolytes are organised and the other side is not,” one source said.
It was
after that meeting that BBC insiders believe Turness concluded support for her
was ebbing away. She decided to quit.
The BBC
said it did not comment on individual board meetings and that the minutes would
be published in the normal way.
As BBC
staff react with differing degrees of shock, anger and sadness at the whirlwind
set of events that led to the weekend’s resignation of Turness and Davie, some
are pointing to those meetings as a culmination of a much wider, political
story.
“Anyone
who thinks this is about a 12-second clip on a Panorama more than a year ago
that not a single viewer complained about is not reading the proper story,”
said one. “What’s going on here is much more about macro politics.”
There are
differing opinions about the severity of the BBC errors referred to in
Prescott’s letter.
Many
agree there were errors, not least with the editing of the Trump speech – a
mistake that Trump has now responded to with the threat of a $1bn lawsuit.
But many
say the events of the past week also have to be seen in the context of a wider
political effort to shift the BBC’s reporting to the right on key issues.
It is a
campaign that insiders believe should be exposed. “It was obvious to [Turness]
that her job had become impossible,” said one.
Those
with concerns over the political background to this crisis say it has its roots
in Boris Johnson’s time in government and an effort to shift the stance of
institutions such as the BBC, seen as too liberal and left wing.
And they
see a clear line from that decision to the events of the last week. Gibb was
placed on the BBC’s board when Johnson was prime minister. The Guardian has
been told that Gibb, in turn, was a driving force behind handing Prescott his
advisory role on the EGSC – on which Gibb also sits.
As a
member of the EGSC, which is a small but crucial committee in overseeing the
BBC’s editorial output, Gibb also had a say on the issues investigated and the
reports commissioned.
Gibb has
been a hugely controversial figure among BBC staff for some time. He and
Prescott have previously been reported to be friends – something they have not
denied.
All of
that contributes to a sense among critics that instead of Gibb reaching a
dispassionate view of Prescott’s report, the two men are instead allies in the
same cause.
Suggestions
of a political operation to muzzle the BBC are denied by the alleged key
actors.
Johnson
has rejected any such suggestion as “complete and utter bollocks”. The BBC said
Gibb was only one of a four-person panel that appointed Prescott and only one
of 13 board members. In his letter, Prescott said his criticisms “do not come
with any political agenda”.
Many BBC
insiders disagree. Some who accept serious mistakes were made in relation to
the editing of the Trump speech nonetheless see the Prescott report, and Gibb’s
influence in pushing both its author and its findings, as part of a partisan
attempt to pressure the BBC from within.
“[Gibb]
is absolutely central to it,” said a BBC source, adding that the BBC’s
editorial leaders had been outplayed. Another said the resignations were a
“victory for Robbie Gibb”.
There is
another ingredient to the crisis that still baffles the BBC newsroom. With the
Telegraph rolling out its coverage of Prescott’s letter since Tuesday, why had
the corporation remained silent for so long, standing by a strange position not
to “comment on leaks”?
Insiders
say the truth is damning. They say figures within BBC News, including Turness,
wanted to be far more proactive in responding. As early as Tuesday, there was
talk of apologising over the Trump edit in order to clear the way for a robust
defence against Prescott’s broader allegations of institutional bias.
Several
sources said Shah blocked this, opting to wait until the board could come to a
collective view in its response to parliament’s culture, media and sport
committee, whose Conservative chair, Caroline Dinenage, had been expressing
criticism over the alleged failings included in Prescott’s letter.
A lot of
BBC figures are now questioning the role of Shah, who is meant to lead the
board and guide discussion. They blame him for allowing a vacuum that was
ruthlessly exploited by the BBC’s opponents. Some describe him as weak and “not
in charge of his board”.
“There
was a deafening silence and it got worse as the week went on,” said one figure.
Another said Turness was blocked from commenting “by the chair”. A third said:
“The Trump escalation could have been avoided if the board had listened and got
ahead of it.”
By all
accounts, there was genuine shock, even among the BBC board, over Davie’s
decision to quit. They had seemingly not realised the cumulative effect of the
rows that had engulfed Davie’s leadership over the previous year, from Gaza
coverage to Gary Lineker’s social media activity.
BBC staff
also see an irony in the departure of Turness, who will go on gardening leave
imminently. Several said she had been one of those trying to broaden out
coverage and appeal to Reform voters, including by championing some key Farage
coverage during the election campaign. “She was keen to make sure coverage was
as accessible as it could be,” one source said. “She was the one arguing [for
it].”
The
departures of Davie and Turness leave the BBC exposed and rudderless as it
enters crucial talks over its future and the licence fee.
After the
resignations on Sunday night, senior BBC editors met to discuss the fallout.
“Shock and real sadness” were the overriding emotions. The episode has also
left everyone wondering whether running the BBC is even possible in a
politically hostile environment.
Yet even
now, there are obvious questions remaining. Nick Robinson, one of the BBC’s
most senior presenters, who has taken up the task of piecing together the
events of the last week, observed one of the most glaring.
“Neither
[Turness] nor the outgoing director general Tim Davie explained what they
thought had gone wrong,” he said.
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