The BBC’s never-ending crisis
Allegations about a high-profile presenter have
exposed how vulnerable the institution is in an era of populist politics
https://www.ft.com/content/34c31089-2267-42b6-a88b-ec93f6842d00
Daniel
Thomas, Oliver Barnes and Chris Cook in London JULY 14 2023
Last week,
BBC director-general Tim Davie was preparing to launch a fresh start for the
national broadcaster after months of turmoil.
In April,
Richard Sharp had resigned as chair of the BBC because of a perceived conflict
of interest over his relationship with former prime minister Boris Johnson at
the time he was appointed to the job. That was just weeks after a political
furore around the football presenter Gary Lineker, who had compared the
government’s immigration rhetoric to Germany in the 1930s.
For Davie,
the launch of the BBC’s annual report, which took place this week, would be an
opportunity to wipe the slate clean.
Instead,
Davie was alerted last Thursday by the BBC’s press office that The Sun
newspaper was planning an exposé about one of his top presenters which involved
claims of paying a teenager for explicit pictures.
It was the
start of a swirling and rancorous scandal that has dominated the national
conversation for more than a week — not least of all, on the BBC itself. But it
has also exposed just how vulnerable an institution the BBC is in the current
media and political climate.
A week
after the first report, there is still little concrete information about
whether Huw Edwards, the presenter of the News at Ten, has actually done
anything unprofessional or unethical.
The police
have already concluded there was no criminal behaviour. He has been suspended
by the BBC while it conducts its own investigation. According to his wife Vicky
Flind, Edwards, who has talked publicly in the past about his struggles with
depression, is in hospital after “suffering from serious mental health
issues”.
While many
other details remain unclear, the Edwards furore is the latest demonstration of
how the BBC has become a political punching bag in an era of populist politics,
its aspirations for impartiality lampooned by critics on the right and left as
an establishment cop-out.
Particularly
for sections on the right of the Conservative party — and for a number of
rightwing newspapers including The Sun — the BBC is often easy fodder for
culture war-style attacks. Many of those same papers also resent the compulsory
licence fee that British TV viewers pay to support the BBC.
Within days
of the first allegations about a then unnamed presenter, Lee Anderson, deputy
chairman of the Conservative party, accused the BBC of being “a safe haven for
perverts” and called for the licence fee to be scrapped.
Even in the
best of times, says a former board member, the BBC exists in a state of
“perma-crisis”. In a bid to maintain its image of transparency, the BBC often
reports exhaustively on itself — but sometimes that only serves to amplify the
criticisms of the way it operates.
“The BBC
has to transact its day-to-day business surrounded by a circular firing squad
of rightwing newspapers,” says David Yelland, a former editor of The Sun. “The
one thing the BBC can never be accused of is censorship or not covering itself
properly, but the problem is the enemies of the BBC know that, so they rely on
the BBC assisting in destroying itself.”
Newsroom figurehead
For the
BBC, this week has become a painful reminder of a crisis from over a decade
ago. In 2012, it emerged that Jimmy Savile, who had been a prominent BBC
presenter and personality for decades, had been a serial sexual abuser and
rapist. Not only was the BBC later found to have enabled his behaviour, it
cancelled a posthumous exposé of him after his death in 2011.
While the
new allegations are very different to the claims against Savile, one senior
reporter says: “Anything that links us to child protection failure is basically
the worst possible story for us”. The Savile scandal, which continues to be
raised by critics of the BBC, was a major factor in the 2012 downfall of George
Entwistle, then director-general.
It is also
damaging that the allegations have been made against the figurehead of the BBC
newsroom. Not only does Edwards present the flagship nightly news programme,
but he also fronts major national events — from election night to the recent
coronation. His was the voice that announced the death of the Queen to millions
of homes. To many in Britain, Edwards epitomises the idea of the BBC as a
public service broadcaster that can, at times, unite the nation.
For Davie,
the story in The Sun left him scrambling to show that he was taking the
allegations seriously — but also not rushing to judgment in the absence of
conclusive evidence.
When it was
revealed that the BBC’s complaints team had known about the claims since May,
politicians demanded to know why the allegations had not been elevated more
quickly to the senior executives, and why more was not done to contact the
family or speak to the presenter.
The BBC
says it tried twice to reach the family — once by email and a second time by
phone — but had not attempted to contact them since June 6. Edwards was not
approached until last Thursday, just before the Sun story appeared — which was
when Davie also first learnt about the claims. Davie has ordered a review of
the BBC’s internal procedures.
Despite the
unhappiness with some in the newsroom, BBC insiders say that Davie’s job is
secure. “He could only make decisions based on the information he had and the
organisation moved very quickly when it went to Davie,” says one BBC executive.
“Whether he should have been told before is another matter and that’s what
we’ll look at next.”
Only last
year, the BBC had to conduct another internal probe over the conduct of former
Radio 1 DJ Tim Westwood, which found that there may have been times when the
corporation should have done more to investigate allegations against him. The
corporation has acknowledged it received six complaints about bullying and
sexual misconduct, which the DJ denies.
The BBC ran
a live blog providing minute-to-minute coverage of its own crisis through the
week, with the frequent sight on BBC news of its own reporters standing outside
the BBC seeking comment from itself over allegations against the then unnamed
BBC star.
Current and
former BBC staff are now questioning whether the broadcaster went too far in
trying to break allegations in its news reporting of the scandal in a bid to
prove independence.
Jon Sopel,
a former correspondent for the BBC, says “that The Sun newspaper and BBC News
need to look at themselves over some of the reporting because all it amounts to
is someone with a complicated private life and mental health issues”.
“I think
that the BBC will definitely come out tarnished from this,” says another former
BBC presenter. “I can’t think of any other news organisation that goes after
itself so remorselessly.”
Political crosshairs
In recent
years, the BBC has come under increasing attack from politicians who accuse it
of defending the political status quo, including the Scottish National Party
and Labour when it was headed by Jeremy Corbyn.
The most
prominent criticism, however, has come from the right and has been amplified by
newspapers from the Mail group and from those owned by Rupert Murdoch,
including The Sun.
“The BBC is
always in the crosshairs of party factions that have spent decades campaigning
against its existence,” says Claire Enders, an independent media analyst.
George
Entwistle, then BBC director-general, speaks to reporters after giving evidence
to a select committee in 2012 over the BBC’s handling of sex abuse allegations
by Jimmy Savile © Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images
John
Simpson, the BBC’s world affairs editor, summed up the view of many in the BBC
when he told BBC Radio 2 that rightwing press coverage “feeds into a concerted
political campaign in this country against the BBC. It’s encouraged by the
Murdoch newspapers, by The Telegraph and the Mail group; they want to see
effectively the end of the BBC, they want to see it destroyed.”
The
populist tone of some of the criticism is often married with complaints about
the licence fee. Obliging every TV owner to pay the BBC £159 a year was easier
to justify when it was the main provider of news and entertainment: it has
become a harder sell when people are also paying for Netflix or Spotify.
The BBC is
also under increasing pressure financially given a real-terms fall in income of
close to a third since 2010, and expectations that this will worsen as
inflation erodes its income given a two-year freeze on the licence fee.
The
broadcaster has sought to cut costs and rationalise some of its operations over
the past year, but analysts argue that these spending constraints make it even
weaker when fighting for viewers against deep-pocketed US tech groups such as
Amazon, Netflix and Apple.
The BBC
said on Tuesday that it faced “tough choices” about “much loved services”.
Earlier this year, the BBC was forced to reverse a decision to cut the BBC
Singers chamber choir after pressure from musicians and politicians. But
insiders worry what will need to be chopped next, and about whether it will
find the money to build the next generation of TV and radio services.
Many at the
BBC want to focus attention instead on The Sun for publishing the allegations
in the first place, especially after the lawyer for the young person in
question said he had issued a denial that the newspaper did not print.
The
Independent Press Standards Organisation had received 80 complaints about The
Sun’s coverage of the saga and was reviewing them to assess whether the paper
had breached the editors’ code, according to a spokesperson. At one stage
during the week, Edwards’ Twitter account liked a tweet suggesting The Sun
could “face the mother of all libel actions”.
The Sun
defended its reporting, saying that it neither named Edwards nor the young
person involved in its initial story and adding that it was other media outlets
including the BBC that first made “suggestions about possible criminality”.
Amid the
many unanswered questions, the stakes appear higher for a state broadcaster
seeking to balance impartiality with ethical propriety, than for a tabloid
newspaper free to set its own agenda.
“The Sun
has done what it does best, it’s damaged the BBC and it’s been talked about in
every news bulletin for an entire week,” says David Yelland, the former editor.
“The atmosphere at The Sun won’t be negative, it will be positive.”
This
article has been amended to reflect that Gary Lineker’s comment was about the
government’s immigration rhetoric rather than policy
Letter in
response to this article:
BBC might
be better financed by subscription / From Bill Maryon, Cliftonwood,
Bristol, UK
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