Sunday Express

Joan Bakewell on the day she had to fend off a government minister... with no help from BBC ‘predators’

- By Berny Torre

JOAN BAKEWELL has told how she was sexually harassed early in her career by a government minister – and also claimed there were “predators” within the BBC.

The broadcaste­r, author, journalist and Labour peer has revealed how she was the “victim of unwelcome attention” during the 1950s and 1960s.

In the interview, to be broadcast on Times Radio at noon today, Joan, 87, described how a junior minister, who has since died, had to be “fended off” after he made a grab for her.

She said: “I was assaulted by a member of the government in a taxi when I went to fetch him from the Commons to come on the programme.

“You know, this kind of thing happened, it happened all the time.”

When asked whether she reported the minister to police, she said there would have been no point.

She explained: “They would’ve said, ‘Well, that’s just to do with your private life, you’re all right, he’s not done anything that breaks the law’.”

She also said there was no point in discussing harassment with senior figures at the BBC, “because they would be doing the same thing”.

Baroness Bakewell, who fronted factual programmes including Late Night Line-up and Heart Of The Matter, described how a group of women at the BBC had attempted to lodge a complaint against a male member of staff who later got promoted “pretty near the top”.

“There was someone who was persistent­ly harassing a whole department of women as it were, one by one,” she said.

“He would invite them home and behave badly and they began to tell each other.

“They began to share the secret with each other and found it hateful and so they decided that they would all get together and as a group make a protest about this person.

“And they went to the head of department and it eventually went as far as the controller.

“The person was reprimande­d and then he was

VALUES: Baroness Bakewell is now a Labour life peer promoted.” Although there were “numbers of predators” within the BBC, Baroness Bakewell said no one knew about Jimmy Savile at the time.

But, she added: “We all thought he was extremely weird.”

Baroness Bakewell has spoken previously of her support for the #Metoo movement, which campaigns against sexual violence, hailing its values and female solidarity.

In the interview, Baroness Bakewell of Stockport also described accepting a peerage from former Labour leader Ed Miliband, despite voting for the Green Party at the previous election due to her anger over the Iraq war.

“I marched against the Iraq war with about a million other people,” she said.

“So I wasn’t going to vote Labour, didn’t support the Labour Party at that time and I had to explain that to Ed Miliband.

“I said, ‘I’d like you to go away and consider whether you want me to be a Labour peer and I have to consider whether I want to be’.

“So we agreed to speak again, at which point Ed said, ‘Yes I would like you to’ and I said, ‘I will

accept’.”

 ??  ?? VICTIM: Joan on set back in 1965. She endured ‘unwanted attention’ from a junior minister as a journalist
VICTIM: Joan on set back in 1965. She endured ‘unwanted attention’ from a junior minister as a journalist

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom