Tories
threaten Channel 4 after ice sculpture takes PM's place in debate
Conservatives
say they could review channel’s broadcasting remit if they win election
General
election latest – live news
Jim
Waterson Media editor
Thu 28 Nov
2019 18.52 GMTLast modified on Fri 29 Nov 2019 00.21 GMT
The
Conservatives are threatening to review Channel 4’s broadcasting remit if they
win the general election after the channel decided to replace Boris Johnson
with a melting ice sculpture during its climate change debate.
A Tory
source confirmed that the party would review Channel 4’s public service
broadcasting obligations if Johnson is returned to Downing Street next month. Under
the proposal, first reported by BuzzFeed News, they would “look at whether its
remit should be better focused so it is serving the public in the best way
possible”.
Channel 4’s
licence runs until the end of 2024, meaning it would need renewing under any
new government if the next parliament lasts a full five years. While the media
regulator Ofcom is tasked with reviewing the channel’s output, Channel 4 is
state-owned and its existence is underpinned by legislation that could be
altered by parliament.
A
Conservative spokesman, Lee Cain, said he had written to Ofcom demanding an
investigation, claiming Channel 4 had breached the broadcasting code with “a
provocative partisan stunt” that constituted “making a political opinion in its
own right”.
He accused
Channel 4 of a “wider pattern of bias” after the cabinet minister Michael Gove
turned up at the TV studio alongside the prime minister’s father, Stanley
Johnson, but was not allowed to take Johnson’s place. The broadcaster said this
was because the debate was only for party leaders.
Earlier
speculation that the ice would be carved in a representation of the prime
minister proved wide of the mark. The Brexit party’s Nigel Farage got the same
treatment after also refusing to go head to head with other leaders.
The
Conservatives are in negotiations with the BBC over Johnson’s public
appearances in the election campaign, having failed to agree a date for the
prime minister to take part in a one-on-one interview with Andrew Neil.
Every other
party leader has agreed to subject themselves to a half-hour examination on
primetime television by one of the BBC’s toughest political interviewers.
Labour believes that Johnson is trying to back out of this commitment.
Johnson
told BBC News that he would do “all sorts of interviews with all sorts of
people”. This has angered Labour, which claims it only put Jeremy Corbyn up for
interview after being told the prime minister had also agreed a Neil interview
next week. The BBC strongly insists it never said the booking was confirmed.
To confuse
matters further, the Conservatives have now proposed Johnson should appear on
the BBC One’s Sunday morning Andrew Marr Show, although it is unclear whether
this is an attempt to avoid Neil’s scrutiny.
There has
been a breakdown in relations between the Conservatives and Channel 4, with the
Tories privately saying it is an explicitly leftwing outlet and will not give
them a fair hearing, especially after comments made this summer by its news
chief, Dorothy Byrne.
Ben de
Pear, the editor of Channel 4 News, said the decision to replace Johnson and
Farage with frozen water was justified. “These two ice sculptures represent the
emergency on planet Earth, not in any human form but are a visual metaphor for
the Conservative and Brexit parties after their leaders declined our repeated
invitations to attend tonight’s vital climate debate.”
Clive
Lewis, the shadow Treasury minister, said: “Boris Johnson is a coward and a
bully. He thinks he is born to rule and is so used to getting his own way that
he turns nasty when anyone dares challenge him. Britain deserves a prime
minister that has enough of a backbone to face up to scrutiny.”
A
Conservative party spokesperson said: “We are deeply disappointed that Channel
4 News has conspired with Jeremy Corbyn to block the Conservatives from making
the case for tackling climate change and protecting the environment in this
evening’s debate.
“Under this
government the UK was the first advanced economy in the world to legislate for
a net zero target and we’ve reduced emissions faster than any other advanced
economy while continuing to grow our economy.
“Broadcasters
have important responsibilities to present a balanced debate representing all
parties, and Michael Gove was well qualified to represent the Conservative
position at this evening’s debate.”
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