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U.S. Chairwoman Donald ruffâs threat to eugene sue the BBC for an eye-popping $1 one million million US has upped the ante in what was already defining up as an existential crisis for Britainâs public broadcaster.Â
In a letter to British MPs on Monday and later in a media interview, BBC chair Samir Shah apologized for what he called an âerror in judgmentâ that led to a clip of Trump in a 2024 documentary being edited in a way that distorted what he had said.
The clip on the BBCâs premier documentary program, Panorama, featured Trump addressing supporters before an angry crowd stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.Â
An internal review by an independent BBC ethics adviser that was leaked last week by the Daily Telegraph newspaper said the clip made it sound like Trump explicitly urged supporters to start a riot when in fact the two parts were taken from different points of the same speech.
At the time of its original broadcast, the documentary â which was made by an external production company â attracted limited attention. It was only after the leak in the Telegraph that it became a full-blown crisis for the BBC.
Not content with the mea culpa â and the resignation Sunday of the BBC's director general Tim Davie and news division CEO Deborah Turness â Trumpâs lawyers sent the broadcaster a letter Monday demanding a full apology, retraction of the documentary and compensation. It threatened the nine-figure lawsuit if the corporation didn't comply.
In a statement immediately following the resignations, Trump referred to the journalists responsible as being âcorrupt.â
Trumpâs lawsuit follows other legal action heâs either taken or threatened against a string of U.S. News outlets, including the New York Times, CNN, the Wall Street Journal and CBS.Â
The fallout from the leak and the resignations it triggered has ignited a crisis within Britain over the future of the BBC and its values. However, it also raises far-reaching issues of alleged media bias and the potential weaponization of political narratives, including in the war in Gaza.
Trump's Jan. 6 speech: BBC's edit vs. What he actually said
Des Freedman, a media professor at Goldsmiths, University of London, says it's not surprising the U.S. President has come in with a big threat.
âGiven that the BBC has admitted to re-editing, youâd have been shocked had Trump not used this as a political opportunity to further weaken anyone who might ever stand his comments up to critical scrutiny," he said.
The Telegraph's leak of the internal review by adviser Michael Prescott contained other damaging accusations with equally troubling implications for the BBC.
Prescott accused the corporation of "systemic issuesâ of bias including downplaying anti-transgender voices. Concerning coverage of the war in Gaza, the report said the broadcaster's Arabic-language news service repeatedly ignored stories dealing with the suffering of Israelis and refused to publish stories critical of Hamas.
Director general Davie's resignation statement did not address any of Prescottâs specific criticisms. Instead, he wrote that while âoverall the BBC is delivering well, there have been some mistakes made and as director general I have to take ultimate responsibility.â
Likewise, in her remarks outside BBC Broadcasting House as she arrived Monday morning, outgoing news boss Turness refused to discuss any of the specific concerns that led up to her decision to leave.
âI stepped down over the weekend because the buck stops with me,â she told reporters. ÂBut I'd like to make one thing very clear â BBC News is not institutionally biased. That's why it's the world's most trusted news provider."
Nor are its journalists âcorrupt" as Trump has alleged, she said.
Thatâs also the position of Prime Minister Keir Starmer, according to a Downing Street spokesperson.
The BBC has long faced accusations of political bias from commentators and parliamentarians on the political right, particularly during the 14 years of Conservative governments, which ended when the Labour Party won the 2024 election.Â
But Trumpâs culture battles with the media in the United States have also upped the stakes in Britain, says Freedman.
'There is no institutional bias,' BBC News CEO says after resignation
For many BBC critics, the issue Monday morning was how the broadcaster intends to fix what they see as an "institutional bias."
Speaking on BBC Radio 4âs Today program, Lord Charles Moore, a former Telegraph editor, said that has been especially overt in the corporation's coverage of the war in Gaza, where he accused it of pushing pro-Hamas narratives.
âHere is an absolutely massive problem â a problem never addressed and a problem never admitted,â said Moore.
The BBC has admitted to several errors in its coverage of the war, but it says it has strived to cover it impartially. It was also sanctioned by the U.K. Broadcasting regulator over a documentary about a teen who survived Israel's bombing that didn't disclose he was the son of a Hamas official. Davie has previously apologized for how the file was handled.
Meanwhile, the broadcaster has also been repeatedly accused of caving to pro-Israel critics by many on the political left, including the Centre for Media Monitoring, a British group that says it aims for "responsible reporting" of Muslims and Islam.
In a report released in June, the group found that over the first day of the war in Gaza, the BBC gave Israeli casualties 33 times more coverage than those of Palestinians on TV and Radio platforms. It also chronicled multiple instances where it claimed the broadcaster used more âemotiveâ language to describe Israelis than Palestinians â "Israelis are 'butchered,' Palestinians simply 'die,'" the report said.
In an unusual editorial statement, Radio 4 presenter Nick Robinson, one of the corporation's most prominent journalists, appeared to suggest the accusations of bias against the BBC are being driven by certain members of the board that oversees the BBCâs programming.
Robinson specifically cited Sir Robbie Gibb, who he says is a former BBC executive who held senior positions in former Conservative governments and helped set up the right-leaning media outlet GB News. Gibb has not directly responded to the allegation.
Robinson also noted that at the time in October 2024 when the BBC aired the Panorama report featuring the controversial edited clip, âthere were no complaints received about the editing of Donald Trump's speech.â
Among those appearing to delight in the BBCâs troubles Monday was Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, a right-wing populist who has repeatedly criticized what heâs called the BBCâs âwoke ideology.â
âThe BBC has been institutionally biased for decades,â Farage said at a London news conference.
And yet, while his party is one of the the broadcaster's biggest detractors, it has also arguably been one of the greatest beneficiaries of its political coverage.
BBC advocates have repeatedly accused the soon-to-be-departing director general Davie of trying to ingratiate himself with Farage by providing his party with excessive media coverage, including featuring it in prominent news bulletins more than political rivals.
âThe director general has gone out of his way to mollify right-wing voices,â said Freedman, the professor.
âI donât know if you call that an irony, or his just being fed to the sharks that fed himself for so long.â
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