BBC needs new rules for appointing chair in wake
of Richard Sharp affair, says David Dimbleby
Current system gives too much power to prime ministers
says broadcaster – but rules himself out of running
Sat 29 Apr
2023 10.58 BST
The veteran
broadcaster David Dimbleby has said a cross-party public commission should
appoint the BBC chair, in the wake of Richard Sharp’s resignation after
breaking rules over dealings with Boris Johnson – but ruled himself out of the
running for the job.
Sharp
resigned after being found to have breached public appointment rules for
failing to declare a connection to a secret £800,000 loan for the UK’s former
prime minister.
Talking to
BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Dimbleby said the current system gave too much
power to prime ministers to select the BBC chair and that a new way needs to be
found.
“We’re not
idiots politically, we know everybody has political views. We know they
disagree,” Dimbleby said. “But we look for somebody to run something like the
BBC who sets their politics to one side. The best way of assuring that would be
to have a commission made up of all parties … and let them decide.”
The Sunday
Times revealed earlier this year that Sharp had secretly helped an
acquaintance, Sam Blyth, who wanted to offer an £800,000 personal loan
guarantee for Johnson, during the period Sharp was applying to be BBC chair.
Sharp
resigned on Friday after an investigation by the commissioner of public
appointments concluded he had broken the rules by failing to declare his link
to the loan, creating a “potential perceived conflict of interest”.
It is still
not known who ultimately provided Johnson with the loan, which only became
public after he had left office.
Dimbleby
said it was unclear whether Sharp had misled or should have explained further
about his involvement in the loan, but that the affair showed a new way of
appointing the BBC chair should be found.
Dimbleby
also said Johnson “rode roughshod over accepted practices” during his time in
No 10 and had leant on the Department for Media, Culture and Sport to get Sharp
appointed.
Pointing to
Johnson’s proroguing of parliament in 2019, Dimbleby said his behaviour had
“blown apart” the UK’s political system, which “works by convention and
practice and habit and relies on people behaving decently”.
He said
Johnson’s behaviour showed why the power of the prime minister in choosing the
BBC chair needed to be curtailed.
When asked
if he would be interested in becoming the next BBC chair, Dimbleby ruled
himself out of the running. He has previously applied for the role twice
unsuccessfully.
“I’m now
focusing on broadcasting, which has always been my greatest pleasure. So I’ll
carry on doing that. And if asked to do it, I’ll say ‘no, thank you very much,
not this time round,’” he said.
The former
BBC journalist Andrew Marr endorsed Dimbleby as a good candidate for the job on
Newsnight on Friday evening.
He said: “I
personally would like to see a really big, experienced proponent of public
service broadcasting who would remoralise and lead the BBC in a new way. He
will not thank me for saying so, but someone like David Dimbleby is who I’d
like to see.”
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