Analysis: from anti-racism protests to trans rights, who gets to choose topics where impartiality matters is a live issue

Tim Davie has a problem. When the BBC director general was appointed a year ago, he said restoring trust in the BBC’s impartiality was his first policy objective. With one eye on securing a future licence fee funding settlement with a hostile government, he suggested the corporation needed to be “free from political bias” and shed the idea that its output represented a narrow viewpoint.

But now he’s implementing the policy, he’s finding the devil is in the detail. Who exactly gets to define what impartiality means? Which topics – such as the climate crisis – no longer require dissenting voices, in the eyes of the BBC? And what happens when some of your own staff believe that certain topics simply should not be up for debate?

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

FTSE 100 hits record high

Blue-chip stock index rises above previous record of 7,903 set in May…

Cannes 2022: the alpha auteurs line up for a post-pandemic party

The film festival announces itself back to normal, with a new TikTok…