Emily Maitlis replaced for Newsnight episode
after Cummings remarks
Katie Razzall will step in after BBC reprimands host
over ‘breach of impartiality rules’
BBC bosses reprimanded Emily Maitlis for attacking the
government on its handling of Dominic Cummings.
Jim
Waterson
Published
onWed 27 May 2020 19.07 BST
Emily
Maitlis has been replaced as host of Wednesday night’s episode of Newsnight
after BBC bosses reprimanded her over a monologue in which she attacked the
government’s handling of Dominic Cummings’ lockdown trip to Durham.
News bosses
at the corporation said the BBC2 programme’s lead presenter breached
impartiality rules with her opening remarks on Tuesday night. She will be
replaced on Wednesday by the Newsnight reporter Katie Razzall.
In the
monologue Maitlis told viewers: “Dominic Cummings broke the rules – the country
can see that and it’s shocked the government cannot.
“The longer
ministers and the prime minister insist he worked within them, the more likely
the angry response to the scandal is likely to be … He made those who struggled
to keep to the rules feel like fools, and has allowed many more to assume they
can flout them.”
Talking of
Johnson’s “blind loyalty” in the face of plummeting poll ratings, she expressed
bafflement: “The prime minister knows all this and has chosen to ignore it.’
Clips of
the sequence went viral on social media, attracting millions of views – many
more than tune in to Newsnight on a typical evening. However, it caused fury
among both Conservative politicians who have largely parked their longstanding
criticism of the BBC during the pandemic, and also some journalists in and
outside the public broadcaster who felt it went against the corporation’s
approach to journalism.
BBC news
bosses agreed with the criticism of its own show, swiftly issuing a statement
distancing themselves from the monologue. BBC sources said Newsnight’s editor,
Esme Wren, worked on Tuesday night’s episode.
“The BBC
must uphold the highest standards of due impartiality in its news output,” the
corporation said in a statement. “We’ve reviewed the entirety of last night’s
Newsnight, including the opening section, and while we believe the programme
contained fair, reasonable and rigorous journalism, we feel that we should have
done more to make clear the introduction was a summary of the questions we
would examine, with all the accompanying evidence, in the rest of the
programme.
“As it was,
we believe the introduction we broadcast did not meet our standards of due
impartiality. Our staff have been reminded of the guidelines.”
Keith Brown,
SNP deputy leader, said: “This statement is a gutless capitulation by BBC
bosses. Newsnight should be commended - not slapped down - for their serious
investigative work on Cummings, that’s not something you could say about the
BBC News at 10.
“Pandering
to 10 Downing Street by curbing journalists from being able to hold the UK
government to account is of serious concern.”
An SNP
spokesperson added: “It’s ironic that the only apology over the whole Dominic
Cummings lockdown breaches scandal comes from the BBC.”
Maitlis’s
profile, already high, has skyrocketed since she was made lead presenter of the
nightly current affairs show last year, shortly after publishing her book
Airhead on life as a television presenter. She received global acclaim after
confronting Prince Andrew about his connections with the deceased paedophile
Jeffrey Epstein, becoming possibly the only journalist who can claim to have
conducted an interview with a member of the royal family that turned out to be
career-ending for the royal.
However,
her increasing willingness to deliver opinionated monologues – including one in
April dismissing the idea that coronavirus is a “great leveller” given its
disproportionate impact on poorer people – has raised concerns among some on
the show that the approach is not suited to a BBC political programme. There
are suggestions of wider editorial tensions within the programme on the
approach, even as it attracts enormous online interest.
The BBC has
increasingly struggled to hold the line on issues of impartiality in its news
coverage, having tied itself in knots over comments about Donald Trump by BBC
Breakfast’s presenter Naga Munchetty. It also struggled to deal with the enormous
levels of criticism from both Labour and the Conservatives during the 2019
general election.
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