As a former BBC journalist, it is excruciating to watch heads roll over a lapse in editorial standards at one of the great British institutions that thrived for 103 years. What is even more shocking is that the BBC’s persistent bias towards Israel during the Gaza war—including its repeated suppression of genocide allegations—never triggered resignations. Yet a single edited speech by a U.S. president, unnoticed by him or his supporters for more than a year, has forced out not one but two of the corporation’s most senior executives.
A comprehensive review by the Centre for Media Monitoring (CfMM) of the BBC’s coverage of Israel’s war on Gaza found that presenters amplified Israeli perspectives 2,340 times, compared with only 217 Palestinian viewpoints—a stark imbalance. Editorial failures undoubtedly are reprehensible, but when politics and other interests come into play along, it becomes an existential question.
Ironically, the Trump edit was first uncovered by the BBC’s own internal audit. Once a memo about the audit leaked, the story exploded into public view. The Panorama episode containing the doctored speech was never even broadcast in the United States. Nonetheless, President Trump—who has cultivated a reputation for litigiousness—has decided to sue the BBC for defamation, reportedly seeking between one and five billion dollars, despite the corporation’s formal admission of error and apology.
The BBC, one of Britain’s most revered institutions, has become so vast and its portfolio so diverse that controversy is almost unavoidable. In recent years it has generated more headlines about itself than almost any other media organisation. Its scandals have included Martin Bashir’s deception of Princess Diana’s brother to secure her 1995 interview; allegations of sexual harassment against a co-presenter of MasterChef; racist remarks from another presenter; and the failure to cut away from live Glastonbury coverage when crowds chanted for the killing of Israeli Defence Force soldiers.
Yet despite such debacles, the BBC remains Britain’s most trusted news organisation. A 2020 Reuters survey found that 56 percent of U.S. respondents also considered it trustworthy. Still, the latest breach—splicing together two comments Donald Trump made 50 minutes apart on 6 January 2021, the day of the Capitol attack—has plunged the corporation into crisis. Managing director Tim Davie and head of news Deborah Turness both resigned after a leaked memo revealed that the edit was misleading.
Their departures were all but inevitable—driven not only by the threat of litigation but also by sustained political pressure, largely from the rightwing forces. For those seeking control over political narratives, the BBC represents both an obstacle and an opportunity; its missteps are seized upon to advance partisan and commercial interests. It is notable that the Israeli embassy in London issued an unusually strong statement following the resignations, accusing the BBC—particularly BBC Arabic—of distorting reality, omitting vital context, platforming antisemitic and extremist narratives, and contributing to public misinformation and radicalisation.
The BBC’s vulnerability stems from its unique structure: a publicly funded institution financed through the licence fee, the level of which is set once every ten years. This arrangement limits direct government control, frustrating political actors and commercial competitors who view the BBC’s guaranteed funding as an unfair advantage. Although the corporation enjoys broad public support, fringe groups on the right often portray it as excessively liberal—despite a board largely appointed by the previous Conservative government, and despite Conservative ties among its own leadership. Chairman Samir Shah has donated to the party, and Tim Davie once stood as a Conservative councillor candidate in a London borough.
Several British and U.S. outlets reported that when the internal memo leaked via the right-leaning Telegraph, senior BBC leaders initially delayed acknowledging the error due to resistance from a board member who argued for a more sweeping admission. That board member was identified as Robbie Gibb—former communications director to Prime Minister Theresa May, long-time BBC senior editor, adviser to GB News (often characterised as the UK’s Fox News), and a figure connected to the 2020 purchase of the Jewish Chronicle. Gibb has declined public comment. Sir Ed Davey, the leader of the third largest party in parliament, Liberal Democrats has called for his removal from the BBC board.
This crisis arrives at a perilous moment, with the next licence fee settlement due in 2027. Critics of the BBC are already preparing to use the controversy to influence those negotiations. Sensing the danger, MP Stella Creasy has called for mutualising the BBC to protect it from “interference by partisan elites”. The BBC’s predicament underscores the growing importance of media ownership to the public interest. Corporations seek ever greater sway over media narratives, while political actors attempt to weaken public institutions or capture them by appointing ideological allies. For decades the BBC was celebrated as a global model of independent, impartial public broadcasting. This scandal lays bare just how fragile that independence has become.
There are lessons for us as well. Half-measures will fail: politicians and commercial rivals will always exploit vulnerabilities within public media. Our own Media Reform Commission has proposed credible safeguards to protect the autonomy of state-owned media—particularly regarding board composition—and these recommendations should be fully implemented. Transparency in ownership and robust accountability in governance must be treated as urgent priorities.
(Published in The Daily Star on November 17, 2025.)
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