Political coverage row puts BBC funding under threat
Britain’s new government is taking aim at the BBC, accusing it of bias in reporting the recently concluded elections that gave Prime Minister Boris Johnson a sweeping mandate.
The row over perceived partiality from the corporation and ensuing threats about its licence fee funding have erupted before but this time come against a backdrop of tensions about Brexit.
The issue is likely to dominate the brief of newly-reappointed culture minister Nicky Morgan in the run-up to talks in 2022 about whether to maintain the licence at current levels.
Morgan has said she would be "open-minded" about scrapping the licence and replacing it with a Netflix-style subscription service. The government has previously committed to maintain the licence fee model until 2027. A standard licence costs each British household just over £154 ($202, 182 euros) a year.
But junior finance minister Rishi Sunak suggested non-payment could now be decriminalised. "That is something the prime minister has said we will look at, and has instructed people to look at that," he said on Sunday.
In the last financial year to April 30, the BBC received £3.7 billion in funding from the licence fee -- an enviable revenue stream in tough economic times for media companies.
That makes it open to criticism, particularly from commercial rivals as advertising revenues fall, and viewing habits and news consumption change to streaming and social media. A largely right-wing print media, meanwhile, sees the giant corporation as an unapologetic bastion of the liberal, metropolitan -- and largely pro-EU -- elite.
Anger and frustration at the failure to implement Brexit -- particularly outside London -- has only made the situation more acute. Johnson’s electoral success largely came on the back of populist sloganeering to "Get Brexit Done" but he also faced criticism that he was unwilling to face close scrutiny over his policies.
His ruling Conservative party were incensed when one of the BBC’s top political interviewers, Andrew Neil, publicly berated the premier on air for refusing to speak to him. The Tories were also angry at the broadcaster’s reporting of a story from the main opposition Labour-supporting Mirror about a young boy sleeping on the floor of a hospital.
The government has not denied reports it has since stopped senior ministers from appearing on BBC radio’s flagship "Today" show, which often sets the day’s political agenda. To some extent, the row is the most recent example of the government of the day trying to control its media image.
But Ivor Gaber, professor of political journalism at the University of Sussex, said the threats were also "revenge" for Neil’s personal attack on Johnson and the hospital scandal. Jean Seaton, professor of media history at the University of Westminster and the BBC’s official historian, said similar criticism from Labour made the situation more dangerous. "That’s what’s unusual," she told AFP, describing the face-off as an "information war".
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