Charles
Moore
Former Telegraph editor Charles Moore has
criticised the BBC on various occasions.
No 10 told Charles Moore appointment could put
BBC's independence at risk
Corporation veterans issue their warnings after
reports former Telegraph editor in line to be next chairman
Dan Sabbagh
Sun 27 Sep
2020 19.58 BSTLast modified on Mon 28 Sep 2020 04.37 BST
BBC
veterans have warned Downing Street that it risks compromising the
broadcaster’s independence by indicating it wants the former Telegraph editor
Charles Moore to be the corporation’s next chairman before the appointment
process gets under way.
Concerns
were also raised about Moore’s commitment to the public broadcaster, given that
he has been a serial critic of the licence fee in public and private.
Alongside
Moore, Boris Johnson also wants to hand the chairmanship of communications
regulator Ofcom to the former Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre, as part of a wider
attempt to shake up the media by placing rightwing figures in key positions.
Mark
Damazer, a former controller of Radio 4 and member of the BBC’s governing
board, accused No 10 of “undermining the recruitment process by giving such a
firm steer. It piles on the pressure on those responsible for interviewing
candidates.”
The current
BBC chairman, David Clementi, is due to step down in February, but the formal
recruitment process for the job has yet to begin. One source said there was
still wrangling about the salary, with Downing Street pushing for it to be
increased from the existing level of £100,000 a year.
Oliver
Dowden, the culture secretary, said he would be launching the appointment
process for the BBC shortly and praised both former editors, saying “clearly,
there are strengths to both Charles Moore and Paul Dacre”. He added that he
wanted a “strong, big person who can hold the BBC to account”.
Insiders
said there were particular concerns about how far Moore supported the
broadcaster and its longstanding licence fee-funded model. “You have to be in
the universe of believing in the BBC,” one argued.
Earlier
this year Moore, 63, said the licence fee was “the greatest single wrong on
which the BBC rests” and an “offence to freedom”, arguing that it should be
significantly reduced – slashing the budget it would have to spend on radio and
television.
Theoretically,
the principle of the licence fee – a compulsory £157.50 annual levy on every
television-owning household – is secure until the next BBC charter review in
2027. But there is a mid-term review due in 2022, which will set its level and
review BBC governance.
The BBC
chairman has no direct responsibility for individual programmes, but does have
the power to dismiss its director general, Tim Davie, who only started in the
job earlier this month. The chairman also runs the board, responsible for maintaining
accuracy and impartiality.
Ten years
ago, Moore was fined £262 for refusing to pay the annual levy because the BBC
failed to fire Jonathan Ross and Russell Brand after the presenters had been
accused of bullying actor Andrew Sachs live on air.
The
journalist and newspaper columnist, a former boss of Johnson, is known for a
range of outspoken views, having argued in the past that Muslim immigration
meant “more political disturbance, more communal tension, more intolerance of
other faiths and more terrorism”.
Moore has
also said he views the threat of climate change as alarmism – in contrast to
the overwhelming scientific view – and has written that it is designed to
produce “unprecedented government control and the relative impoverishment of
western societies”.
Nicky
Campbell, the breakfast presenter on Radio 5 Live, singled out a passage in an
“interesting column” in which Moore suggested the eventual consequence of equal
marriage legislation would be that people could marry their dogs.
Moore also
once claimed that Olivia Colman had a “leftwing face” and was therefore an
unsuitable actor to play the Queen, in the Netflix adaptation of The Crown,
although as BBC chairman, he would not have any say in casting decisions.
As with the
BBC, the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport is due to begin a
public appointment process for the £120,000-a-year chairmanship of Ofcom, the
communications regulator whose activities cover broadband, mobile phone
spectrum management and postal services, as well as commercial television and
complaints against the BBC.
Dacre, 71,
has spent his entire career in newspapers, which are not regulated by Ofcom,
culminating in his editorship of the Daily Mail for 26 years. Downing Street
sources said reports about the two men being lined up for the jobs were
“broadly” correct, although added that “neither is over the line yet”.
Labour said
it did not want to get into a political argument about either Moore or Dacre
until “the proper process” had concluded. Jo Stevens, the shadow culture
secretary, said the party would “give our view then” and accused No 10 of
trying to distract the public from the coronavirus crisis.
“Why is he
trailing in newspapers stories about potential individuals becoming heads of
public service organisations [when] people are worried about their jobs and
their health?” the Labour MP asked.
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