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BBC Corruption
Thanks to The Public Defender for this information.
The Chairman
BBC Trust
Dear Sir,
CAN WE TRUST EITHER THE BBC, OR THE BBC TRUST?
I refer to the recent statement by the BBC Trust on the BBC website
in which you say:
“We have made clear that we regard any deception or breach of faith
with our audiences as being utterly unacceptable”. (My emphasis)
However, I suggest that this statement is not true. Deception by
the BBC is clearly widely practised and even glaringly obvious examples
are apparently ignored. Therefore some forms of deception are apparently
condoned by both the BBC and the BBC Trust. I therefore believe
that the BBC Trust can therefore also be accused of deceiving the
public and of a breach of faith towards the licence fee paying members
of the public and the viewers generally. The reasons for claiming
this are broadly set out below.
BBC Trust Report: “See Saw to Wagon Wheel”
Although the BBC Trust is responsible for ensuring impartiality
by the BBC it approved and adopted as its own the BBC Report “From
See Saw to Wagon Wheel”. This was published only about three months
after the BBC Trust came into being. This 81 page report on “impartiality”
in the 21st century virtually ignores one of the main criticisms
of BBC bias over the last 35 years i.e. that relating to the BBC’s
bias in favour of Britain’s membership of the EU.
The Wilson committee confirmed two years previously to this Report
that the BBC was biased in favour of the EU, that the BBC failed
to report issues on the EU that should have been reported and that
“urgent action was necessary to put this right”. Despite this recommendation
the BBC Trust has virtually ignored the problem of proven pro-EU
bias in its Report. In addition, where the report does refer briefly
in passing to the possibility of pro-EU bias, these references are
generally qualified by the claims that the BBC came “late” to Euro
scepticism or that the BBC was “ignorant” about Europe.
It can therefore be argued that the BBC Trust has in effect, already
made its excuses about any claims of pro-EU bias in this Report.
This is considered to be a breach of faith by the BBC Trust as it
implies that any complaints of BBC pro-EU bias will not be promptly
and impartially dealt with by the BBC Trust in the future. This
view is possibly borne out by the BBC Trusts response to Lord Pearson’s
complaint in July this year that only one person in 5 interviewed
by the Today programme was a Eurosceptic. Despite this statistically
proven evidence of bias you replied that this complaint would be
looked at “in the autumn”. This tends to confirm the view that the
BBC Trust, like generations of BBC governors before it, is not going
to treat complaints of pro-EU bias with the vigour and urgency they
deserve.
Furthermore, there are a number of questionable or possibly misleading
statements and views throughout the Report which, through having
adopted the Report as its own can therefore be taken to be the views
of the BBC Trust. Many of these are discussed in the addendum to
this letter. No doubt, it will be argued that these quotations are
taken out of context, or that they are only included as part of
the discussion to illustrate the immense difficulties the BBC has
with impartiality. In addition, it could be argued that the Report
goes on to discuss the problem and describes methods of dealing
with some of the problems raised. Unfortunately, the BBC cannot
be trusted to take any more notice of the guidelines contained in
this Report than the notice the BBC has taken of the producer’s
guidelines or its legal obligations under its Royal Charter in the
past, as the examples listed below tend to show.
Unfortunately the BBC Trust has already given the (probably mistaken)
impression that complaints of many other forms of bias will also
not be dealt with impartially as the BBC Trust has apparently already
claimed in its Report that the opposite view “is perfectly sustainable”.
This implies that the BBC Trust is going to excuse future complaints
of bias in the same way the BBC has in the past i.e. by claiming
that because opposite complaints even up the score this “proves”
the BBC is being impartial. Hence the BBC Trusts commitment to ensuring
the BBC’s compliance with the Reports recommendations is open to
question.
Therefore, to eliminate any doubt as to its intentions and to honour
its claim that “any deception or breach of faith with our audiences
as being utterly unacceptable” the BBC Trust should justify the
statements it has put its name to within the Report as discussed
in the Addendum to this letter, see Para’s referred to in the Addendum
for the discussion. The BBC Trust is also asked to justify why no
action has apparently been taken by them in the obvious and well
publicised cases of deception included in the list below. The BBC
Trust is also asked to consider demanding the dismissal of all the
BBC staff involved in the scams listed, or to justify why simply
reprimanding them or moving them within the BBC is considered satisfactory.
(See Para 9 of the Addendum to this letter.)
1) The BBC Trust to justify its statement that “Impartiality has
always been (together with independence) the BBC’s defining quality”
(My emphasis) (See Para 4.2)
2) The BBC Trust to justify its statement that “Impartiality has
always been (together with independence) the BBC’s defining quality”
(My emphasis) (See Para 4.3)
3) The BBC Trust is to consider the dismissal of Helen Boaden and
ALL the BBC staff involved in the recent incident involving John
Redwood. (See Para 4.11)
4) The BBC Trust to consider the dismissal of ALL the BBC staff
involved in the incident involving HM the Queen. Peter Finchams
“resignation” is simply not adequate and ALL the BBC staff involved
should be considered for dismissal. (See Para 4.19)
5) The BBC Trust is to ensure that ALL BBC voxpops are to be banned
forthwith. (See Para 4.24)
6) The BBC Trust to justify the statement in the Report that claims
the BBC was “ignorant” of Europe. (See Para 4.25)
7) The BBC Trust is to consider the dismissal of ALL the BBC team
involved in selecting speakers and producing Question Time. (See
Para 5)
8) The BBC Trust is to consider the dismissal of ALL the BBC team
involved in producing the Today programme. (See Para 6)
9) The BBC Trust is to consider the dismissal of ALL the BBC team
involved with the scam on the Graham Norton show. (See Para 7)
10) The BBC Trust is to consider the dismissal of ALL the BBC team
involved in the biased news report on Nigel Farage’s visit to Romania.
(See Para 8)
11) The BBC Trust is to consider the dismissal of ALL the BBC team
involved in the questionable claims made by BBC Information in their
reply to my letter of complaint on the way that BBC news presented
the item on Mr Farage's visit to Romania. (See Para 8)
12) The BBC Trust is to establish the facts behind the Sunday
Times report 7 Oct, 2007 that although Alan Yentob allegedly admitted
to the practice of “nodding” the BBC has apparently now claimed
it cannot find any evidence of Yentob using trickery. If correct
as reported some one in the BBC is not telling the truth and the
BBC Trust should consider the dismissal of all those involved.
The BBC Trust should also consider resigning en-bloc for the breach
of faith it has allegedly displayed by endorsing, approving and
issuing as their own document the BBC Report “From See Saw to Wagon
Wheel“. A Report which includes a number of questionable statements
and claims but which virtually ignores major areas of the BBC’s
lack of impartiality in the past.
Yours faithfully
(Addendum to letter dated 8th October 2007)
I refer to the statements by the BBC Trust and by Mr Mark Thompson
published on the BBC web site on Wednesday 18th July 2007 after
the BBC had to admit that it had deceived the public by rigging
the results in a number of phone-in competitions. As a result the
phone-in competitions have rightly been suspended, one hopes for
good.
1) The BBC Trust stated:
“We have made clear that we regard any deception or breach of faith
with our audiences as being utterly unacceptable”. (My emphasis)
2) Mr Thompson stated;
“There is no excuse for deception. I know the idea of deceiving
the public would simply never occur to most people working in the
BBC”.
3) “Deception” is generally defined as “deliberately presenting
misleading information to others”. Similarly, “Deceit” is defined
in the Oxford Reference Dictionary as “The act or process of deceiving
the public or misleading esp by concealing the truth”. BBC deception
and deceit is therefore much more widespread and goes much deeper
than scamming the public on phone-in competitions, when the BBC
staff may be under pressure to save their programme while on air.
But of course the BBC is currently only admitting to deception
occurring in phone-in competitions and is giving the impression
that once these are stopped and BBC staff have attended their “re-training”
courses the problem will have been solved.
However, there are many other areas in which the BBC is deceiving
the public by claiming to be impartial when it is not. The BBC Trust
is apparently supporting the BBC in this scam by ignoring many glaring
areas of bias and deception. Some examples are discussed below.
4) Report: “See Saw to Wagon Wheel”
The BBC Report, ”From See Saw to Wagon Wheel: Safeguarding Impartiality
in the 21st Century” published in June 2007 was approved by BBC
senior management and also approved and adopted by the BBC Trust.
It will therefore be referred to as the BBC Trust Report. This report
was a major exercise for the BBC and must have cost many thousands
of pounds of licence fees to produce. One might expect therefore
that it would be totally accurate and honest in its content. This
is particularly important bearing in mind that it was approved and
adopted by the BBC Trust, the body responsible for ensuring impartiality
by the BBC. Unfortunately, there are a number of questionable statements
in the BBC Trust Report which could give the wrong impression and
may therefore mislead and/or deceive the public. Some of these are
discussed below.
4.1) Title Page
The title can be misleading; “Safeguarding impartiality in the
21st century” gives the impression that the BBC was impartial during
the 20th century which is not true.
4.2) Page 2: Foreword,
The first line of the BBC Trust Report states that “Impartiality
has always been (together with independence) the BBC’s defining
quality”. (My emphasis.)
This is an incredibly unwise claim for the BBC Trust to make as
it arguably not sustainable in the case of pro-EU bias. It is also
probably not sustainable in many other forms of BBC bias notably
its alleged left wing bias which is also briefly discussed below.
a) The Breakfast Meetings
It is a historical fact that the BBC deliberately chose to support
Ted Heath’s campaign to win over public support for his disastrous
decision to join the then EEC. The infamous “breakfast meetings”
in the early 1970’s between BBC officials, government ministers
and Foreign Office officials are now widely recognised as having
taken place. The BBC even sacked Jack de Manio, the popular radio
presenter of the “Today” programme at that time as he was seen to
be anti-EEC, although the BBC has always denied this was the reason.
(NB See also Para 5 below.)
Hence, the BBC cannot, by any stretch of the imagination, be described
as always being impartial, or that “impartiality” has always been
the BBC’s defining quality, particularly as the BBC deliberately
supported Britain’s entry into the EEC in the 1970’s. Since then
it has been alleged that the BBC has never deviated from its commitment
to“Europe”. The BBC must therefore have allegedly been deliberately
deceiving the British public for well over thirty years as to its
supposed “impartiality” on this issue.
The BBC Trust has therefore made a categorical statement in the
first line of the Foreword to the BBC Trust Report which must be
justified.
b) Wilson Committee
The Wilson committee confirmed in January 2005, just over 2 years
before this report was issued, the BBC’s “institutional mindset”
in favour of the EU and said the BBC was failing to report issues
(about the EU) which ought to be reported. Its main conclusion was
that “urgent action is required to put this right”. Yet the BBC
Trust chose to ignore the findings of the Wilson committee in a
major review of “impartiality”.
Hence the BBC Trust Report simply serves to confirm the view that
the BBC is in denial over its bias towards the EU and therefore
no amount of BBC self-regulation or monitoring by government appointed
governors, Trusts or committees is ever likely to correct this.
It should be noted that the Wilson Committee was only set up after
persistent and frequent complaints to the BBC by Lord Pearson based
on a vast amount of statistical data proving BBC bias towards the
EU had been established over many years by Minotaur Media Tracking
Ltd. (MMT). After countless denials of bias by both the BBC and
the Governors Complaints Committee an independent review confirmed
that the BBC was biased in favour of the EU and was not therefore
impartial in its treatment of European matters.
Admittedly, there is in the 81 pages of the BBC Report a small
concession (by omission) that accusations that the BBC is hostile
to Euro-scepticism and sympathetic to Euro-federalism were correct.
Passing references are also made in the Report about the BBC’s difficulty
in “recognising” Euro-scepticism. But these failures are virtually
dismissed by feeble excuses. A pro-EU “institutional mindset” is
a massive problem to overcome in an organisation currently employing
27,000 people and which has allegedly had this mindset for 35 years.
Deliberately ignoring this vast problem simply debases the value
of this Report on “maintaining” impartiality to nil.
c) Left Wing Bias
Similarly, the BBC Trust Report tends to dismiss the alleged left
wing bias in the BBC of which there are many examples.
For example, the Evening Standard, 25th February 1997, reported
that the BBC had given Labour candidate Ben Bradshaw five months
paid leave to fight a marginal election seat. A former BBC radio
presenter, Graham Robb, was allegedly sacked when he was chosen
as a Tory candidate in the 1987 election.
The Sunday Times, 20th September 1995, reported that the BBC was
to spend thousands of pounds of licence-payers money sponsoring
a Labour Party celebration for new MPs at its conference in Blackpool.
The entire intake of newly-elected Labour MP’s would be invited
to the event to be hosted by Andy Parfitt, Radio 1’s controller.
A spokesman defended the BBC’s use of the licence fee, saying “It
is an opportunity for the controller of Radio 1 to address new Labour
MP’s about young people”.
The Rt. Hon. John Whittingdale, OBE, MP, when he was Shadow Minister
for Culture, Media and Sport, wrote in Heartland, October 2003,
that the Conservatives presented a dossier of specific examples
of bias to the BBC, focussing on its coverage of the local election
results. He said “the BBC privately acknowledges that we were entitled
to complain, but unfortunately the damage had been done”.
Nevertheless the first line of the BBC Trust Report states that
“Impartiality has always been the BBC’s defining quality” (my emphasis).
The BBC Trust Report also essentially dismisses allegations of left
wing bias by saying that “it was a minority view”.
A more recent example of anti-Conservative Party bias was the BBC’s
action in humiliating John Redwood by showing in Aug 2007 a 14 year
old clip of him trying to sing the Welsh National Anthem. The clip
was included during BBC coverage of Conservative Party plans to
cut red tape to which the BBC clip had no relevance whatsoever.
(See Para 4.11 below.)
I therefore challenge the BBC Trust to justify its statement that
“Impartiality has always been the BBC’s defining quality”. (My emphasis)
4.3) Page 2: Foreword
Again, in the first sentence of the BBC Trust Report you state
that “Impartiality has always been (together with independence)
the BBC’s defining quality”. (My emphasis.)
a) This is again a questionable statement bearing in mind that
the BBC has practically always been totally dependent on the government
of the day to agree its total income through the iniquitous licence
fee system.
In addition, the BBC has been lent vast sums of money by the European
Investment Bank, a main aim of which is to lend money to projects
which are “achieving European aims”. (My emphasis.) This does not
appear to comply with the BBC’s legal obligation for impartiality
and independence.
During a recent debate in the House of Lords on the EU constitution
it was revealed that a number of members who spoke in favour of
adopting the EU constitution were receiving pensions from the EU,
the continuation of which was conditional on their continued support
for greater EU federalisation. It is inconceivable therefore that
the EIB loans to the BBC involving many millions of pounds would
not contain certain obligations as to the support expected by the
EU in return for the loans in the same way as it is for grubby EU
pensions which are little more than bribes. The BBC has always denied
any conflict with their legal obligations for impartiality in the
terms of their EIB loans. The terms of the EIB loans must be fully
exposed to check the veracity of the BBC denials and the BBC Trust
claim that BBC independence has always been the BBC’s defining quality.
(My emphasis.)
As an example consider the BBC’s treatment of the Countryside March
which took place on Saturday 21st Sept 2002 and was the biggest
mass demonstration for human rights that had ever been seen in Britain.
A total of over 400,000 people took part and many others were prevented
from taking part due to traffic and access problems.
Predictions the BBC would go to any lengths not to achieve “balance”
were borne out, as an inordinate coverage was given to a small group
of anti-hunt protestors. The Countryside Alliance criticised as
“trite” the interview by the Today programme on 23rd Sept, of an
Australian busker who was singing animal welfare songs during the
march rather than dealing with more substantive issues.
BBC1 devoted just a few minutes to the march out of the entire
3 hour breakfast show, and had dropped it completely by lunchtime.
The pro-referendum rally, on October 27th this year, promises to
be much bigger than the Countryside March. It will be interesting
to see if the BBC gives it more than a few minutes coverage on prime
time TV. The significant question however is will the terms of the
EIB loans allow it to as it is against EU principles to allow voters
to express their views in an election when they know it will not
be in the EU’s favour.
I therefore challenge the BBC Trust to justify its statement that
“Independence has always been the BBC’s defining quality”
4.4) Page 11: Accuracy and Impartiality
“The BBC’s compliance with impartiality is the responsibility of
the BBC trust. The Framework Agreement accompanying the 2006 Royal
Charter states that the BBC “must do all it can to ensure controversial
subjects are treated with due accuracy and impartiality in all relevant
output” which is defined as output consisting of news or dealing
with matters of public policy …….”
Like, for instance, the BBC and the BBC Trust producing at great
expense to the licence fee payers an 81 page Report on “impartiality”
which virtually completely ignores its pro-EU “institutional mindset”,
allegedly prevalent for thirty five years.
4.5) Page 16: The Falklands War
In its reference to the BBC‘s treatment of the Falklands war the
BBC Trust Report gives the impression that the BBC’s biggest “crime”
was to surrender editorial control by allowing the MOD spokesman
Ian McDonald to give the latest military position without “vetting”
his statements thereby relinquishing “editorial control”.
This was clearly not a problem to the public as Mr McDonald was
obviously making statements on behalf of the MOD. Allowing this
to happen was probably infinitely more preferable than the BBC doing
its own reports. In his autobiography “Upwardly Mobile” Norman Tebbit,
(now Lord Tebbit), described the unctuous “impartiality” of the
BBC’s editors. He said few would forgive the phrase, “the British
authorities, if they are to be believed, say … …”, or the regular
references to British and Argentinean forces rather than “our forces”
and “enemy forces”.
Far more serious was the fact that accounts of the Falklands war
describe how the BBC World Service broadcast tactical information
useful to the enemy, not just once but many times during the conflict.
This was a treasonable offence which unfortunately was not pursued
through the courts after the war ended.
4.6) Page 33: Westminster Parliament
The BBC Trust Report says that the “Westminster Parliament is less
esteemed, and now competes for attention with other centres of democratic
expression – in Edinburgh, Cardiff, Belfast and Strasbourg …..”
Why Strasbourg? Strasbourg is a side show compared to Brussels.
Why is the BBC Trust so coy about mentioning Brussels? Is this is
another example of the BBC’s pro-EU mindset which avoids bringing
attention to the massive take-over of the British way of life by
the unelected EU commissioners and bureaucrats in Brussels and the
real and potential loss of our ancient rights and privileges?
As for being “less esteemed:” Westminster is practically redundant.
The unelected EU commissioners and bureaucrats in Brussels imposed
80% of our new laws last year and our so called “elected” representatives
in Westminster, Edinburgh, Cardiff, Belfast and Brussels etc had
no say in any of them. Hence they are hardly “centres of democratic
expression” as described in the BBC Trust Report.
4.7) Page 33: The BBC and Parliament
Further down the BBC Trust Report states that “The BBC is still
required to provide dedicated coverage of Parliament …..”
Where in that statement is the much vaunted BBC independence evident?
The man who decides how much is paid to the piper calls the tune!
In addition, the BBC uses this requirement as the reason why it
has blanked UKIP and Euro-scepticism so much as UKIP is not represented
in Westminster and there was no call within Parliament to withdraw
from the EU. However, this excuse is arguably not sustainable. No
party within Parliament espouses republicanism, nevertheless the
BBC is allegedly strongly anti-monarchy as recent events have once
again demonstrated and this is discussed further below.
4.8) Page 33: The BBC and UKIP
Again the BBC Trust Report is misleading in its reference to UKIP
and its policy of leaving the EU. It says that “ UKIP had no representation
in Parliament, and therefore no institutional profile to give credibility
to its central policy – British withdrawal from the EU”.
This is not true. UKIP had 3 MEP’s at the time of the European
elections in 2004 and was therefore a legitimate Party within the
main seat of the governing body of the UK, the European parliament
in Brussels. It was therefore arguably not a case of the BBC being
caught “on the hop” by UKIP’s success in the European elections
of 2004 where UKIP pushed the Lib Dems into fourth place. Rather,
it was another case of the BBC allegedly blanking, as far as possible,
any dissenting opinion against the EU as the vast amount of statistical
evidence demonstrates.
4.9) Page 34: The task for content providers
“The task for content providers, in escaping this institutional
bias, is to get out more and devote more time to exploring the undercurrents
of opinion …..” etc.
The BBC Trust Report is again misleading. It gives the wrong impression
of a BBC which is only just realising that many people are opposed
to greater EU federalism. In fact there has always been a strong
public distaste for the EU as the BBC must know having been brought
in 35 years ago to help swing a mistrust of EEC membership into
a more positive approach. Since then the public’s disaffection with
the EU has steadily increased, not just in the UK but in many of
the European countries in the EU as well.
It is therefore incredulous that the BBC Trust calls for content
providers to “get out more” to explore the “undercurrents of opinion”
etc., when their own 81 page report on “impartiality” in the 21st
century totally ignores the findings of the Wilson committee which
confirmed the BBC’s pro-European bias and which also found that
the BBC was failing to report issues which should have been reported.
(See next Para.)
In addition, when the BBC “does get out more” to “explore the undercurrents
of opinion” the BBC does not always give the public the full facts.
A striking example of the way the BBC can deliberately manipulate
the “news” is the evidence of the BBC interview with Elizabeth Winkfield.At
the time Ms Elizabeth Winkfield (EW), was an 83 year old pensioner
living in Devon. Along with other pensioners, she protested at the
crippling council tax increases brought about the previous year
by her local council. She protested in the most practical way; by
refusing to pay any more than that equivalent to inflation over
the previous year’s demand.
Ms Elizabeth Winkfield made front page news when, after being prosecuted
by her District Council on Thursday 19th February 2003 for the residual
amount of Council tax owing, she vowed to go to prison rather than
pay the increase. The Daily Mail, Friday February 20th reported
that she said “… millions goes to the EU and then they make us pay
for it.”
ITV interviewed EW live on Friday, 20th February 2004. During this
live interview she said, “I am not paying because there is so much
waste in the councils and they are sending money to the SW Regional
Assembly and to the EU, without telling anyone. Our money is going
to the French and others whilst we are told there isn’t enough money
to do things here”.
EW was interviewed in her home on Saturday 21st February, for the
Frost programme, to be transmitted on the morning of Sunday 22nd
February. During the interview she allegedly made essentially the
same damaging statements about the waste of her council taxes as
she had stated to the ITV and as described above.
This interview was witnessed by John Kelly. It was apparently stressed
to the BBC film crew present that EW was taking a stand against
the principle of taxes being given to the SW Regional Assembly (SWRA)
and to the EU.
When the interview was broadcast on the Sunday morning, all references
by EW to the SWRA and the EU had been deleted. After EW’s cut down
interview was broadcast, John Prescott was interviewed by David
Frost in the studio.
John Prescott used this opportunity to make a patronising statement
about EW's political drive and initiative to show that the government
“admired” her stand. He urged her to be a good citizen and pay her
taxes and that if she could not afford them help was available.
He then made bland statements about the way some council’s were
overcharging their ratepayers by increasing council taxes well above
inflation. He threatened to “cap” council tax rates if they rose
above inflation this year. He also widened the subject by saying
that the method of raising council taxes was all wrong and his department
was looking at ways to improve it and make it more equitable.
David Frost did not ask him what costs were associated with the
setting up of the EU inspired Regional Assemblies without democratic
involvement by the voters. He was not asked how much of these and
other council tax increases, paid by EW and others, resulted from
taxpayers money being diverted to the EU to fund various EU programmes.
This was, after all, the reason EW was refusing to pay all of her
council tax and was even willing to go to prison for her principles.
In short, the programme enabled John Prescott to patronise EW and
defuse EW’s stand against the costs of the EU by falsely implying
she could not afford to pay the council tax increases. This was
therefore an inaccurate report on her reasons for taking the stand
she did. Miss Winkfield, an 83 year old pensioner, could have ended
up in prison for the sake of her principles and deserved fairer
treatment from Prescott and the BBC which she legally had to pay
for.
The question that also ought to be answered is whose idea was it
to stage this alleged propaganda programme in the first place? Prescott
or the BBC? In either case the BBC possibly illegally used licence
fee payers money (including the cost of sending a BBC film crew
to Devon to do the interview) to produce a programme which gave
Prescott the opportunity to imply that EW’s motives for not paying
her council tax increases were not related to the costs of the EU.
Yet the BBC Trust claims that “Impartiality has always been the
BBC’s defining quality”. (My emphasis.)
4.10) Page 35: Road pricing
The BBC Trust Report says that “Downing Street has encouraged single-issue
petitions on its website, and seems intent on continuing the idea,
despite the potential embarrassment of more than a million and a
half “signatures” in opposition to its preferred policy of road-pricing”.
(My emphasis).
This is again misleading. It gives the impression that Downing
St had a choice in bringing in the policy of road pricing. This
does not appear to be the case. Road-pricing is evidently EU policy
and Downing Street can do nothing about it if the EU decides to
proceed. EU Directive 1999/62/EC refers to the harmonisation of
road-pricing across the EU and road-pricing is being used as a reason
for propping up the EU policy of proceeding with the redundant Galileo
space satellite at vast and un-necessary cost to UK taxpayers.
In fact, the million and a half signatories, most of whom had probably
voted for the Labour, Lib-Dem and Conservative parties if they had
voted at all in the last General Election, had already voted to
stay in the EU and thereby voted for the possibility of EU inspired
road-pricing and the Galileo programme. But of course, these political
parties would not make that clear to the voters, nor it seems would
the BBC which had a legal obligation to “inform” the public.
(NB The same criticism could be made about the Royal Mail troubles
and closure of rural post offices. Four million people signed a
petition to Tony Blair against the policy of closing rural post
offices. They all apparently did not realise that this was a direct
result of EU directives and Tony Blair could not do a thing about
it while we stayed in the EU. The Great British government even
had to get EU permission to give some of our own money to our own
post offices to help them survive. In all the references to the
problems being experienced by competition to the Royal Mail I have
never heard BBC making it clear that this was directly due to EU
directives. Yet the BBC had a legal obligation to inform the public.)
4.11) Page 35: Anti-Conservative bias
The BBC Trust said that “Although other opinion surveys have previously
recorded a minority view of an anti-Conservative bias on the BBC,
it was notable that none of the participants in the Sparkler audience
research discussed impartiality domestically in terms of party politics.
They seemed to regard that as sorted”. (My emphasis.)
Hence the BBC Trust appears to be taking the view that the BBC
may now be free of party political bias. However, let us look at
the John Redwood incident in August this year referred to above
in more detail.
i) The BBC firstly had to decide to include a news report on John
Redwoods announcement concerning Tory plans to cut red tape.
ii) The BBC then had to decide to include a clip ridiculing John
Redwood as part of the news report. (NB These additional items do
not occur by accident.)
iii) The BBC then had to decide what sort of clip to include.
The BBC then had to decide to trawl through its archives to find
a suitable clip
v) The BBC then decided to use a 14 year old clip which from its
age must have been selected to maximise John Redwood’s humiliation
and embarrassment.
In answer to complaints from the public Helen Boaden, Head of BBC
News, was reported to have said “In retrospect we weren’t right
to use that footage again which came from a long time ago”. This
hardly amounts to an apology. In fact, her alleged statement does
not rule out the probability of BBC staff using similar, but more
recent footage! It was not just a case of not being “right” in retrospect.
It must have been a deliberate BBC decision to ridicule and humiliate
John Redwood, a senior Conservative Party member, to the maximum
amount possible when he was delivering a new piece of Conservative
Party policy and in the process belittle the policy being presented.
However, was Helen Boaden herself involved in the decisions to
include this clip? Perhaps the BBC’s Executive Board and the BBC’s
Journalism Board were all involved in agreeing to the humiliating
footage being broadcast. Did none of the BBC’s news team, journalists,
researchers, the news reader or any of the production crew say “I
am independent, impartial and honest”, therefore is it right for
me to include this clip? ALL BBC staff who carry the card stating
that they are “independent, impartial and honest and which the BBC
Trust states is “the first of the BBC’s values”. A claim that is
not justifiable. They should therefore ALL be considered for dismissal
for deception and a breach of faith with the licence fee payers.
(See Para 9)
4.12) Page 39: BBC Banning of Complainants
The BBC Trust Report recounts the case of Mary Whitehouse and how
the then DG Sir Hugh Greene banned her from the BBC airwaves in
the 60’s. It was an abuse of his personal power let alone of her
human rights. The BBC trust Report says that “The fact that such
a ban is unimaginable today ……”
This is misleading. It gives the impression that the BBC would
not think of banning anyone today. However, if a ban is not actually
imposed by the BBC it certainly avoids giving certain classes of
people the opportunity to present their views on the air waves.
Peter Shore, a noted Labour Party minister who was anti-EEC was
never given air time on the BBC. In the 1999 European elections
MMT established that not a single Labour Eurosceptic appeared on
air in more than 250 hours of main national news coverage.
In a smaller way the BBC even bans people from complaining about
its apparent pro-EU bias and censorship. Some time ago the BBC refused
to accept any more complaints from me concerning BBC bias in favour
of the EU. A gross denial of my human rights and a total disregard
of the BBC’s legal obligation to consider all complaints. Apart
from obvious cases of bias in their reporting I was particularly
concerned about the BBC’s apparent censoring of bad news about the
EU. None of my complaints were upheld by the BBC Complaints Unit
or by the Governors Complaints Committee. Yet the Wilson committee
confirmed the BBC’s pro-EU “institutional mindset” and they also
said that the BBC was failing to report issues which ought to be
reported, vindicating in principle my complaints of bias and censorship.
4.13) Page 40; Bias by elimination
The BBC Trust Report states that “Bias by elimination is even more
offensive today than it was in 1926”.
Very true, so why has the BBC Trust eliminated the findings of
the Wilson committee in its 81 page Report on “Impartiality”? Many
more examples of “bias by elimination” involving bad news about
the EU are described in this note including very recent cases. If
the BBC Trust really believes that “bias by elimination” is so offensive
it will take strong and immediate action to consider demanding the
dismissal of any BBC staff involved.
4.14) Page 41; Euro-scepticism
The BBC Trust Report states that “Euro-scepticism was once belittled
as a small minded blinkered view of extremists on both left and
right ….”. (My emphasis)
This appears to accurately describe the view allegedly prevalent
throughout the BBC and which allegedly resulted in slanted BBC reports
on the legitimate views of Euro-sceptics. It also confirms that
in rejecting nearly all the many complaints of pro-EU bias, both
the BBC and the BBC’s governors were not being impartial in their
findings.
Furthermore, the BBC Trust Report gives another misleading impression.
The BBC’s alleged view of Euro-sceptics as being extremists was
not once prevalent; it is still prevalent as the recent report on
Nigel Farage’s visit to Romania clearly confirms. (See Para 8 below)
4.15) Page 42; Andrew Marr Footnote
Andrew Marr is quoted as saying that “….as a BBC journalist…… your
organs of opinion removed with a pair of secateurs……”
Mr Marr hosted a “discussion” programme on the EU some time ago
which was rampantly anti-Euro sceptic. The programme consisted of
Mr Marr as the host, a roving reporter with a hand microphone, pro
and anti-EU proponents as a panel and (presumably) an invited audience.
The anti-EU speakers included Peter Hitchens and Ruth Lea.
The most notable feature of the programme was that the BBC were
going to expose “Lies” said about the EU and these were flashed
up as banner headlines. ALL the items the BBC selected related to
anti-EU statements such as sneers about “straight cucumbers” etc.
NO PRO-EU LIES WERE DISPLAYED THROUGHOUT THE PROGRAMME.
For example:
Ted Heaths lie “we will not lose sovereignty if we join the EEC”
“The European Constitution was equivalent to reading the Beano”
“In Europe but not run by Europe”
“The benefits of being in Europe are so obvious it is not necessary
to do a cost/benefit analysis”
“3 million jobs depend on us being in Europe”
“The EU has prevented another European war”
Etc, etc.
The roving reporter went amongst the audience to get their comments
from time to time and from their comments they all appeared to have
been selected to support the EU.
Peter Hitchens tried to get some real sense and purpose into the
programme by saying that all the discussion so far was unimportant.
What was really important was the question of “who was running the
country”? Andrew Marr agreed and then ignored his comment completely
to go back to the prepared script. He did say that there were a
couple of political parties opposed to EU membership and the BBC
flashed up UKIP together with the Monster Raving Loony Party. The
inference was obvious. Hardly an impartial programme!
In addition, this example clearly illustrates the way in which
the BBC can manipulate the debate about the EU. Although Peter Hitchens
made a very valid and serious point about a really fundamental issue
such as “who was really governing the United Kingdom” the BBC were
clearly not going to be diverted from their prepared objective of
ridiculing Euro sceptics. It proves that the BBC cannot be trusted
to host impartially any debate about the EU.
4.16) Page 60: Political consensus
The BBC Trust says that “the BBC should be wary of political consensus:
it may conceal intellectual laziness, and quite often turns out
to be wrong”.
Absolutely true in the case of membership of the EU! Perhaps the
BBC will now take its own advice and produce a number of impartial
programmes examining the real issues involved in EU membership.
(See comments below)
4.17) Page 61: Peter Fincham
The BBC Trust Report says that Peter Fincham, Controller BBC 1,
has been “intrigued by the amount of time some in senior management
spend worrying about impartiality”.
This looks like a particularly in-appropriate quote bearing in
mind the fiasco Peter Fincham allegedly presided over with regard
to the BBC decision to include a film clip which could embarrass
HM the Queen as discussed below.
4.18) Page 64: Paul Dacre’s Comments
The BBC Trust Report referred to Daily Mail Editor Paul Dacre’s
Cudlipp lecture on 22 January 2007 as a “philippic”. They quoted
him as saying that “under the figleaf of impartiality” the BBC was
“imposing its own world view”. The BBC Trust Report described Mr
Dacres criticism as “the latest of several accusations of a political
conspiracy levelled by those on the Right – a notion which few who
have worked at the BBC would recognise”.
It was possibly unfair of the BBC Trust to label Mr Dacres comment
as an “accusation of a political conspiracy” as there is nothing
in the quote selected which appeared to justify that accusation.
In fact, from the examples of BBC manipulation quoted it would appear
that Mr Dacre’s comment concerning the BBC “imposing its own world
view” was essentially correct. Remember the BBC’s decision to support
Britain’s entry into the EEC, its alleged continuous commitment
to “Europe” ever since and the BBC treatment of Ms Elizabeth Winkfield
referred to above.
Furthermore, whilst a formal political conspiracy probably does
not exist in the BBC the net effect from the consensus of opinion
within the BBC as described and discussed in the BBC Trust Report
virtually amounts to the same thing. If there is anything approaching
a political conspiracy in the BBC it is in the appointment of staff
where they all seem to be of a like mind and no conscious effort
appears to be made to employ “right wingers” to balance the opinions
held by staff members.
Nor was it correct to imply that it was only those on the Right
who held such a view as Mr Dacre’s. In 1996 BBC bosses invited Lord
Skidelsky, a leading academic and former SDP peer and Jean Lambert,
Green Party activist, to analyse the Corporations political coverage.
The results were reported by Anthony Doran and Sean Poulter on the
front page of the Daily Mail, 16th April 1996, under the headline,
“You are soft on Labour, BBC told.” Lord Skidelsky, Professor of
Political Economy at Warwick University, said, “My view also was
that the BBC was a power-broker and it should not pretend it was
just reporting. They are selecting and creating news (my emphasis).
They decide what’s news and then shape events partly by selecting
what’s important. They didn’t like hearing that much.” The BBC said
“… but these are the opinions of only two people” implying that
the BBC did not accept the adverse comments of the very people it
had commissioned to review its political coverage.
In addition, it appears that the BBC trust has unfortunately already
given the impression that it will not be impartial about complaints
on a number of issues involving bias by the BBC. Paul Dacre argued
that the BBC was hostile to Britain’s past, British values, America,
Ulster Unionism and the countryside amongst other topics. The BBC
Trust virtually dismissed these criticisms in the Report by claiming
“but it is perfectly sustainable to compile different lists and
argue (as many do) ….” . The BBC Trust even claimed that the BBC
could be accused of being “sympathetic” to the police and the monarchy!
(See next Para.)
4.19) Page 65: The Monarchy
The BBC Trust to claim that the BBC could be accused of being “sympathetic”
towards the Monarchy has to be justified.
Bear in mind the furore over the BBC’s treatment of the death of
the Queen Mother. There are many other examples. On the day of HM
the Queens Jubilee the BBC allegedly put on a joke item of two artists
discussing a portrait of Her Majesty formed in excrement and vomit,
judging it to be “better” than Lucian Freud’s portrait. Minutes
later they were allegedly mocking Prince Charles.
The BBC treatment in July this year of the clip showing HM the
Queen walking off a film set in a huff is worth examining in this
context because the main story was missed by the media in general.
The main story was NOT the fact that the Queen was (as it turned
out, erroneously) walking off the set in a huff. Even if She was,
surely HM the Queen is entitled to have a “bad hair day” once in
a while. She is, after all 80 years old this year and she was in
her own home at the time. NO, the main story that the media (and
apparently the BBC Trust) missed was the fact that the BBC were
apparently relishing the opportunity to show Her Majesty in a bad
light! This proved how little respect the BBC has for Her Majesty
and for Her position as Head of State.
However, the BBC incorrectly showed Her Majesty storming OUT of
the interview when in fact Her Majesty was going IN. The whole sequence
was wrong and gave the wrong impression. After the controversy this
caused the BBC claimed that the independent film crew sent them
the film clips in the wrong order and this was agreed by the film
company. BUT, let us look at the BBC’s track record when it is dealing
with people it allegedly despises. The BBC deliberately inserted
a 14 year old film clip into a news report which humiliated John
Redwood. The BBC deliberately corrupted a film sequence of Nigel
Farage which made him look comical and ridiculous. (See Para 8.)
The BBC deliberately showed totally offensive and completely irrelevant
film clips concerning Her Majesty on the day when She was celebrating
a major achievement. Hence, the BBC has a proven track record of
deliberately including in its broadcasts irrelevant items, the net
effect of which is to humiliate and ridicule the subjects involved.
Hence, it has to be recognised that the BBC’s track record indicated
that at the time the BBC was quite capable of falsifying the films
itself. In this case it did not even have to search through 14 years
of film clips to make the switch.
Although Peter Fincham has recently “resigned” after an independent
report was critical of the BBC this single resignation is totally
inadequate. There must have been many more BBC staff involved in
the production of this material and the subsequent events and they
have all been effectively shielded by Finchams resignation. If the
BBC Trust really means what it says about “deception” and “a breach
of faith” being unacceptable ALL the other BBC employees must be
considered for dismissal. One resignation is not adequate or acceptable
in this case where the BBC was apparently relishing the opportunity
to embarrass the Queen over a trivial incident which in the event
proved to be incorrect.
4.20) Page 66: Assertions by BBC staff
The BBC Trust Report says that “ this Report has relied on the
assertions (in private and in public) by BBC staff at programme
making and executive level….”.
In which case how can anyone really trust this Report, bearing
in mind the pro-EU mindset in the BBC as determined by the Wilson
committee and the many other forms of bias described in Robin Aitken’s
book “Can we trust the BBC”?
For example, in the Daily Telegraph of 2nd February 2003, Elizabeth
Day said that Rod Liddle revealed how a “senior editorial figure”
dismissed the Euro-sceptic lobby, fronted by Lord Pearson of Rannoch,
the (then) Conservative peer as insane. Lord Pearson was reported
to have said he was “unsurprised” to have been branded “mad”.
4.21) Page 66: BBC “Thought police”
The Report goes on to say “Conspiracy theorists may quicken their
own pulse with spectres of a “BBC thought police” instructing programme
makers what to think; the reality is much more …. “ (My emphasis.)
This is not correct. The reality is that the BBC “thought police”
did, or possibly still do exist.
In his article in the Spectator for 10th May 2003, Rod Liddle,
ex-editor BBC Today programme, discussed the setting up of the Welsh
Assembly. He pointed out that only 38% of the electorate bothered
to vote in Wales which reflected the public’s lack of enthusiasm
for the new Assembly. However, the BBC’s election night special
presenter did her best to assure the world the reverse was true.
This was despite the fact that Plaid Cymru, the keenest party on
the new Assembly, did extremely badly in the election.
Rod Liddle pointed to the “purblind political correctness” within
the BBC that results in repeated assertions that the Welsh National
Assembly is really adored by the people of Wales, despite overwhelming
evidence to the contrary. Rod Liddle included the BBC’s attitude
to the Scottish Parliament in the same statement.
Further on, he stated the BBC’s attitude was “the result of institutionalised
political correctness, every bit as corrupting as institutionalised
racism”. It is the result of seminars and workshops (I remember
them well) where journalists are instructed time and again that
the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly are bloody important
and don’t you dare suggest they aren’t”. (My emphasis).
These seminars and workshops did not apparently contain any instructions
for the BBC’s journalists to be impartial or to treat these subjects
with due accuracy. The BBC clearly instructed its journalists to
promote the view the BBC wished to promote. In the case of the Scottish
Parliament and the Welsh National assembly the BBC view accorded
with the EU policy of breaking the United Kingdom up into regions
which could be more effectively controlled by “Brussels” (or as
the BBC Trust apparently prefers - “Strasbourg”.)
Another example is the BBC self imposed ban on any exposure of
Peter Mandelson’s sexuality until it was such common knowledge even
the BBC could not ignore it. The reality is therefore that the BBC
is quite capable of defining political boundaries which must not
be crossed where it suits the BBC to do so.
4.22) Page 66: Roger Mosey
The BBC Report quotes Roger Mosey, Director of Sport as saying
I have some sympathies with what Janet Daley says generally about
a liberal/pinko agenda at times”.
This is a heartening change of mind as Roger Mosey, when Head of
Television News allegedly wrote an article in the Independent in
August 2002, rejecting the claim that BBC presenters were “pinko
lefties”. This was just after left wing presenters from the New
Statesman had appeared many times on BBC programmes!
4.23) Page 67: Early stages “missed”
The BBC Trust claims that “The BBC has come late to several important
stories in recent years….. It missed the early stages of monetarism,
Euro scepticism and recent immigration ….”
It is ridiculous for the BBC Trust to claim that the BBC came “late”
to Euro scepticism. This is a lame excuse for the BBC “blanking”
as much as possible the fact that many people are sceptical if not
downright hostile to Britain’s membership of the EU. After all,
the BBC was heavily and willingly involved over 35 years ago in
the propaganda programme to swing public opinion in favour of Britain
joining the EU. Mori polls have shown that the “get out” of the
EU vote has not dropped below 41% since 1987 and has been slowly
increasing since then. This is in spite of the electorate being
told for 25 years by all our main political parties and the media
that the EU is “vital” to the national interest. However, the BBC
Trust is apparently promoting the ridiculous view that the BBC “missed
the early stages of Euro scepticism”.
In addition, the BBC Trust claim that the BBC has come “late” to
“recent immigration” is also ridiculous considering the BBC’s efforts
to present only one side of the immigration saga.
For example, Sir Andrew Green, Chairman, Migrationwatch UK, wrote
to the Daily Telegraph on 10th Nov 2003 to point out successive
opinion polls show that 80% of respondents (including, importantly,
52% of ethnic minority groups) want to see much tougher immigration
controls. Yet … Migration watch had only been invited to speak on
Radio 4 twice that year. His search of the BBC News web site revealed
that the Refugee Council scored 271 references, Refugee Action 231
and Migrationwatch UK, just 6. It is arguably deceitful of the BBC
Trust to claim that the BBC was a little “late” in recognising “late
immigration” when the BBC was clearly doing its best to promote
popular acceptance of mass immigration.
The BBC approach to uncontrolled immigration generally seems to
be to give the impression that nobody from the new countries in
the EU want to come here anyway or, that the immigrants who are
already here are easily absorbed into the community and/or are only
here on a temporary basis and cannot wait to get home again. (See
Para below) However, it does appear that recently the BBC has been
paying more attention to the adverse effects of mass immigration
from Eastern Europeans.
4.24) Page 68: “Voxpop’s”
MMT has reported that the BBC’s use of voxpops is frequently a
cause for concern. It was alleged that time and time again voxpops
are used to give a view which is not representative. During the
introduction of euro notes and coins the BBC tried to make it sound
as if individuals in particular countries were more in favour of
the euro than they actually were. Audiences were almost three times
as likely to hear euro positive voxpop opinions as euro negative
opinions.
The MMT finding was borne out by a real experience quoted in the
BBC Trust Report. Roger Mosey, then Head of BBC News described the
story of a BBC news report on census returns in east London. The
film included interviews with council officials, members of the
Asian community and one white resident – who pronounced himself
happy with his neighbourhood. When Roger Mosey asked him if this
was truly representative of the white community the reporter replied
with pride: “Oh no, we had to work really hard to find him!”
This proves without a shadow of a doubt what has previously been
claimed, that BBC voxpops do not always represent the true picture
and therefore ALL BBC voxpops are suspect and unsafe. If telephone
phone-ins are being banned because the results are so often being
rigged then:
ALL BBC VOXPOPS MUST ALSO BE BANNED IN THE FUTURE AS THE BBC HAS
(PROBABLY INADVERTENTLY) CONFIRMED THAT IT CANNOT BE TRUSTED TO
PRESENT A FAIR PICTURE OF THE SITUATION BEING REPORTED ON!
Other examples include the case of a Polish couple interviewed
soon after Poland joined the EU and hundreds of thousands of Polish
workers were flooding into the country to seek work. In doing so
they were putting great strains on the social services for housing,
schooling, medical services benefits etc., nevertheless the BBC
managed to interview one Polish couple out of the thousands who
were over here who were adamant that they were not going to stay
after the summer but were going back to Poland where they belonged.
Naturally the BBC made no reference during or after the interview
about the possible social or economic effects on the UK population
of giving nearly 40 million Poles the legal right to move to the
UK any day they liked. There must be over 400,000 Poles living and
working in Britain today, yet the BBC managed to interview two of
them who were not going to stay!
This interview was in a similar vein to the report included in
the Nigel Farage visit to Romania, see Para 8 below. The general
aim of these BBC news clips appears to be the same, i.e. that immigration
into Britain by hordes of migrant workers from nations newly admitted
into the EU was not going to be a problem as none of them wanted
to come or those that did were not going to stay anyway!
4.25) Page 69: “Ignorance” of “Europe”
The BBC Trust quotes Stephen Whittle, ex BBC Controller of Editorial
Policy, as saying that “ignorance of subject areas such as rural
life, religion or Europe undermining the BBC’s approach” – an ignorance
the College of Journalism would be aiming to correct”.
To suggest that the BBC may be “ignorant” of Europe as a subject
matter is difficult to comprehend. The BBC employs 27,000 people
many of whom are journalists, economics editors and so on. Since
Britain joined the EEC on 1st January 1973 the UK population must
have stumped up over £50 billion for the BBC through the iniquitous
licence fee system. The BBC was instrumental from the start in helping
to promote the European “idea” and has allegedly never deviated
since from its commitment to “Europe”. To claim therefore that the
BBC is “ignorant” of Europe has to be justified by the BBC, particularly
in view of the alleged quote taken from a speech by Jonathon Chapman,
BBC “Senior World News Reporter”, (previously “Senior Europe Producer”
in Brussels) to a media seminar at the Malta Press Club in March
2004.
“The media is extremely effective …… The UK media approach is broadly
sceptical …… we try in Brussels to break that cycle of scepticism.
The BBC’s job is to reflect the European perspective …… And make
news less sceptical. That is why the BBC has such a big bureau in
Brussels.”
If this is a correct quotation of what Mr Chapman said, and it
was noted by a journalist in the room, then the BBC clearly had
a pro-EU agenda akin to promoting pro-EU propaganda, e.g., “the
BBC’s job is to reflect the European perspective…. And make news
less sceptical”. (My emphasis)
The inescapable conclusion that must result if this quote is correct
is that the BBC has had, even before Britain joined the EU, an agenda
to promote the EU and all it stands for. The best way the BBC can
do this is to consistently keep covering up, to the best of its
ability, the disastrous consequences of Britain being in Europe
and to give generous coverage to stories which put Eurosceptics
in a bad light.
Even if the quote given above is denied by the BBC the last part
must be true. Why should anyone in the BBC lie about the relative
size of the BBC presence in Brussels, “That is why the BBC has such
a big bureau in Brussels”. (My emphasis.) So if the BBC is claiming
to be so “ignorant” about “Europe” what have the large amount of
BBC employees in Brussels being doing for the last thirty five years?
The BBC claim is just not believable.
4.26) Page 72: Democracy and the cold War
Although the BBC Trust Report on “impartiality” did not specifically
include the BBC World Service it did give a potentially misleading
account of some of the BBC World service activities. For example
the BBC Trust Report states that “The BBC has a long and honourable
tradition of international broadcasting in English and many other
languages”. Two cases where this was not so were in the Cold War,
discussed below and the reference to the treasonable acts by the
BBC’s World Service during the Falklands war.
The BBC Trust Report claims that in the case of democracy, the
first public purpose implies a support for the British political
system. (What British political system? We have been under the control
of un-elected EU Commissioners and bureaucrats for over thirty years!)
It says “In the days of the Cold War, it was taken as read that
democracy as practised in America and western Europe was superior
to communism as practised in the USSR and eastern Europe:…….”. It
goes on to say “Attempts to export democracy during the Cold War
were assumed to be a good thing, ……..”.
This gives the impression that the BBC always supported the then
(pre-EU) British democratic way of life. This is not true. The Times,
24th September 1999, revealed that the Foreign Office had accused
the BBC of pro-Russian bias during the Cold War. In 1953, a senior
FO Official met senior BBC management and requested they carry out
an investigation and this was agreed.
In November 1953, the BBC wrote to the FO and accepted that the
news bulletins were open to “misinterpretation”. Criticism of the
pro-Communistic tone of the broadcasts was rejected as a “misconception
of the role” that the broadcasts should play. Miss P. C. Storey
of the FO noted the news bulletins had been ”markedly fellow-travelling
in tone and content” and accused the BBC of being “dishonest” in
its excuses about the use of defectors in its broadcasts.
5) Question Time
The BBC Trust Report contains an example of the public being deceived
by the bussing in of black and Asian people “from afar” to make
up the audience during a Question Time programme broadcast from
Lincoln. What was not mentioned was firstly how were they selected
and was it not a fraudulent use by the BBC of licence payers money
to deliberately mislead the public?
An analysis of the panellists on “Question Time” was carried out
by a viewer, between 6th February 2003 and 23rd May 2003. The viewer
noted there was always a left-wing majority on the panel. Of 13
programmes nine had 3 left and 2 right, two had 3 left and 1 right,
one had 3 left, 1 centre and 1 right and one had 2 left, 1 centre
and 1 right. Left-wing writers and journalists appearing on the
panel outnumbered those from the right. In addition, pop singers,
actors and others who appear on the panels have no obvious qualification
for their presence other than they can be relied upon to be left-wing.
Robin Page, who sometimes provided the countryman’s view on the
Question Time panel and was an extremely popular figure, was told
he would not be appearing on any more Question Time programmes.
He was told “We won’t have you on the programme again; we wanted
you as a countryman, not as an anti-European.” (See Daily Telegraph,
Saturday March 1st 2003.)
More recently, UKIP has been represented on Question Time only
very rarely compared to Labour, Conservative and Lib Dem representatives
although UKIP gained more votes than the Lib Dems in the European
elections. Hence the BBC Trust needs to investigate the panel selection
process of Question Time.
6) The Today Programme
Lord Pearson complained to the BBC Trust in July this year that
the Today programme refuses to cover the fact that Brussels was
putting the failed constitution into place piecemeal, surreptitiously
and illegally and that it refuses to challenge the notion that millions
of jobs depend on our membership of the EU. This shows that the
pro-EU “institutional mindset” is still active in the BBC. The BBC
Trust said it would investigate Lord Pearson’s complaints “in the
autumn”. This displays a remarkable lack of commitment by the BBC
Trust to deal with serious complaints involving pro-EU bias, despite
the Wilson committee call over two years ago for “urgent action”
to put pro-EU bias right. But then the BBC Trust has virtually totally
ignored the findings of the Wilson committee in the first place
so is this what one should expect?
(NB Europhiles frequently claim that 3 million jobs depend on our
being in the EU based on our exports to the EU. Using the same rationale,
it is clear that if we left the EU and manufactured all the goods
imported from the EU ourselves this would open up 3.7 million jobs
as we import far more from, than we export to the EU. For the benefit
of BBC economics editors and the members of the BBC Trust this means
we are 700,000 jobs worse off through being in the EU. No wonder
there is a marked reluctance for Europhiles to discuss the subject.)
Lord Pearson also complained to the BBC Trust that by the end of
2006 Minotaur Media Tracking (MMT) determined that only one in five
interviewees in the Today programme were Euro sceptics. The Today
programme is therefore allegedly deceiving the British public on
two accounts by allegedly refusing to air discussion on “hot” EU
topics and, as has been proven by MMT, favouring Europhiles on its
programmes by a ratio of 4 Europhiles to each Eurosceptic.
(NB This is however not the whole story. If one accepts the BBC’s
pro-EU “institutional mindset” as determined by the Wilson committee
this implies that the pro-EU lobby is actually represented by 9
to 1 under these figures. In which case because the “referee” i.e.
the BBC interviewer, also controls the tone and content of the programme
the pro-EU lobby have an enormous and very unfair advantage. See
for example the reference to Andrew Marr bypassing Peter Hitchens
comment in 4.15 above.)
On page 24 of the BBC Trust Report you say “……..impartiality in
programme making is often achieved by bringing extra perspectives
to bear, rather than limiting horizons or censoring opinion. It
applies to every programme maker and content provider in the BBC”.
So clearly the BBC Today programme is not impartial by your own
definition. So do the Today programme staff qualify for the BBC
pass which says they are “independent, impartial and honest”? If
not, is the BBC Trust going to call for their dismissal and if not,
why not?
7) The People, May 13th 2007.
This issue had headlines revealing that the Graham Norton show
had been faked. An “outside broadcast” was actually being filmed
in the studio next door using actors. One of the actors involved
said they even had a rehearsal and were paid travelling expenses
and were all given a bottle of the wine being used in the in the
studio presentation. This amounts to advertising and licence payers
money was possibly being used illegally to pay the actors, provide
their transport, wine etc., because the whole episode was a scam.
(NB It was noted that the host Graham Norton was not aware of the
subterfuge.)
This was a highly publicised case of deception and fraud to which
the BBC apparently took no action whatsoever apart from trying to
justify the deception. Yet Mark Thomson and the BBC Trust have both
said that deception is unacceptable.
The same newspaper article referred to numerous other scams involving
phone-ins on Saturday Kitchen where viewers were deceived into phoning
in to programmes which had already been recorded.
8) BBC News report on Nigel Farage’s visit to Romania
This report, broadcast on 22nd Dec 2006 introduced Mr Farage as
an “arch Eurosceptic”. I complained in writing by letter dated 23rd
Dec 2006.
In their reply dated 29 March 2007 BBC Information confirmed that
they took “arch” to mean “extreme”. The definition of “extreme”
includes unsavoury nuances. The BBC therefore was trying to convey
to the public that Nigel Farage was in essence, an “extremist” and
was deliberately trying to make sure the viewers were aware of this.
This news broadcast was NOT therefore an impartial report and was
therefore produced illegally.
Also, in their reply BBC Information made a number of other claims
which on the evidence presented above can only be regarded as untrue.
Examples are;
The BBC claimed that; “We aim to afford UKIP a fair and balanced
amount of coverage generally”. Whatever the BBC’s aims are they
are not realised in practice, see Paras 5 & 6 above.
Other examples include the paper published in June 2004 by the
Centre for Policy Studies, “Blair’s EU-Turn: a case study of BBCpartiality”by
Kathy Gingell and David Keighley, MMT, in which it was stated that
up to Dec 2003, UKIP were interviewed only 13 times in 2000 transcripts
on the EU despite (at that time) having 3 MEP’s.
Also, during the 2004 European elections UKIP beat the Liberal
Democrats into fourth place in the number of votes despite the almost
total blanking of the party by the BBC prior to the election. Despite
now having 10 MEP’s in the European parliament the BBC had to apologise
for not including an interview with UKIP during two weeks of reporting
on the recent EU summit this year. Another case of the BBC denying
the Euro sceptic point of view.
The BBC showed a speeded up clip of Nigel Farage during the news
report. I complained that this was intended to make him look comical
and was only fit for the Benny Hill show. The BBC said “it was not
intended to humiliate him (the BBC’s description) and we have used
similar devices in reports about the leaders of the other main political
parties in the past”. In view of the treatment given to John Redwood
their claim that this was not intended to humiliate Mr Farage is
highly questionable as it is clearly not the first instance of the
BBC deliberately using its facilities to ridicule people it allegedly
does not agree with.
The BBC said “We would assure you we do not “set up” people or
interviewees and the contribution was genuine”. This statement was
made to answer my complaint that the barman who harangued Mr Farage
when he entered the bar after the tour was “set up” either by the
BBC or the Romanian government to provide his input. However, the
BBC film crew were all apparently waiting and ready to film the
event before Mr Farage appeared in the bar so the inference is that
they must have known it was going to take place. In addition, this
statement by BBC Information was made 2 weeks after the BBC had
to broadcast a humiliating apology for misleading viewers on the
Blue Peter programme. It can only therefore be regarded as a deliberate
untruth. This was followed up by further revelations of “setting
people up” on a number of phone-in programmes as well as the Graham
Norton show referred to above. In addition, the BBC Trust Report
contains an example where a BBC reporter claimed (with pride) that
he had to work really hard to find someone to interview for his
programme who’s views was not representative of the community at
large.
BBC Information also said in their letter “We have, and continue
to, present audiences with full and impartial information relating
to the EU which has enabled people to make up their own minds on
the subject”. This is not true. The Wilson Committee determined
two years previously that the BBC was “failing to report issues
which should have been reported”. Lord Pearson has pointed out the
alleged refusal of the Today programme to make the public aware
of the underhand way the EU and our politicians are enabling the
EU constitution to be re-introduced. There must be hundreds if not
thousands of complaints on the files of BBC bias towards the EU
which has been evident from slanted reports or no reports at all.
I have written numerous letters of complaint to the BBC concerning
its alleged EU bias and censorship of bad news about the EU and
as a reward for my efforts was illegally banned by the BBC from
complaining.
Other cases refute this claim by BBC Information. MMT established
that during the European elections of 1999, in more than 250 hours
of main national news coverage by the BBC, not a single Labour Eurosceptic
had appeared on air.
9) The BBC “Card”
Let us return to page 2 and the second sentence of the BBC Trust
Report which says “It is not by chance that ALL BBC staff carry
an identity card which proclaims as the first of the BBC’s values
that they are independent, impartial and honest” (My emphasis.)
The BBC has already started to dismiss lower grade employees who
were involved in the phone-in scams. One can understand their position
and the pressure the relevant presenters were under to keep a live
programme on-going and therefore to have a certain sympathy for
their dilemma and subsequent action.
However, one cannot have any sympathy at all for the BBC employees
who abuse their powerful position of trust by deliberately inserting
a 14 year old film clip into a news report which humiliated and
embarrased John Redwood. In the same way one does not have any sympathy
at all for the BBC employees who deliberately labelled Nigel Farage
as the equivalent of an “extremist” before they showed the news
report on his visit to Romania.
The BBC treatment of the staff involved in all the recent cases
involving deception by the BBC is very revealing. Helen Boaden,
is probably paid a six figure salary by the licence fee payers and
still heads a BBC department which hides the identity of and (apparently)
fails to discipline members of its staff who thoroughly abuse their
position by corrupting new items with spurious material which shamefully
embarrasses and humiliates the subject. Despite apparently ignoring
these clear abuses of trust by their staff in the news department
the BBC names and shames and possibly threatens to dismiss a BBC
producer who was guilty of fixing the name of a cat after a phone-in
competition!
Clearly, despite what Mark Thompson and the BBC Trust have said
about deception being unacceptable this is not the case in these
and similar instances. It obviously depends on what the deception
consists of. If the net effect is to humiliate and embarrass Conservative
politicians and Eurosceptics then it appears to be perfectly acceptable
to the BBC and also by its inaction, to the BBC Trust.
Furthermore it is totally inadequate to simply reprimand the staff
involved in these cases of bias and abuse. Just moving them from
one department to another still means they carry the BBC card which
claims they are “independent, impartial and honest” which quite
clearly they are not. If the first of the BBC’s values is to mean
anything at all the only suitable action must be to dismiss the
staff involved.
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