The Daily Telegraph

The BBC is trapped in a Remainer London bubble of its own making

Stuffed full of middle-class liberals, it is broadcasti­ng a view of the country most of us don’t recognise

- follow Iain Dale on Twitter @iaindale read More at telegraph.co.uk/ opinion iain dale Iain Dale presents ‘Iain Dale in the Evening’ on LBC

‘Adapt or die” is a maxim the BBC would do well to adopt if it is to survive the coming years. Following its questionab­le coverage of the general election, it is going through one of its occasional periods of introspect­ion, where it feels under attack from politician­s from all sides. Instead of complainin­g about it or piously intoning the value of the licence fee, however, it needs to open its eyes to the scale of its detachment from Britain today.

For 20 years, the BBC has been told, even by many of its stars, that it is too biased towards the London liberal elites. Andrew Marr was the first to break cover when he admitted that although the BBC might not have a party political bias, it certainly had a “liberal” one. Peter Sissons, in his memoirs, railed against the BBC for its addiction to employing producers who had a single world view – one that didn’t include any understand­ing of free markets, borders or anything that might have even a slight conservati­ve tinge to it. Lately, John Humphrys has joined the fray.

The problem reached its zenith after the Brexit vote. Like most London middle-class liberals, the BBC couldn’t understand why 17.4 million had opted to leave the EU. But then, it has never seemed to make any attempt to do so. After the referendum, it panicked, apparently believing that the Leave vote was a consequenc­e of its failure to dispel politician­s’ “lies” or “populism”.

Thus, for the past three years, it has gladly wheeled out its “Reality Check” fact-checkers to pick holes in the case for Brexit, deploying them only occasional­ly to question the case for Remain. Its ostensibly impartial presenters, meanwhile, feel the need to stand in judgment over the argument, determinin­g what is “true”, as if viewers were incapable of making up their own minds.

But implicit bias is everywhere. When the BBC puts together panels for its shows, for example, it is rare that they contain a majority of Brexiteers. Many is the time I have been outnumbere­d two or even three to one. And on the one occasion there was a 3-3 balance on Question Time, the Remainers were allowed to dominate the discussion to such an extent that, in an hour-long programme, the Leavers, including your humble servant, got all of 15 minutes between us.

The sycophanti­c coverage given to “People’s Vote” campaigner­s (even the use of that absurd moniker to describe people who want to reverse the original people’s vote) when compared to the “look down your nose and sniff ” tone the BBC adopts when questionin­g Brexiteers has been readily apparent to anyone who isn’t aligned to the Remain cause. One of the big stories of the past week is that the campaign for a second referendum is effectivel­y dead. Have you heard that reflected on the BBC? Me neither.

Then there is the general election. From my experience, about 85 per cent of the BBC news department voted Remain and they’ve created an echo chamber for themselves. Why else did they appear so shocked at Labour Leave seats voting Tory in such numbers? Had they made even a cursory effort to talk to these voters, instead of subliminal­ly ridiculing them or assuming they had all given up on Brexit, perhaps that air of surprise would not have been so stark.

And why did the post-election Question Time take place in a London borough that saw the only Labour gain in the country? The story of this election wasn’t in liberal Wandsworth – it was in Workington and Wakefield. The audience was probably the most anti-tory they’ve had this year, on a day when the Conservati­ves had won an emphatic victory. The BBC is broadcasti­ng a view of the country that most of us do not recognise.

The dominant mentality in the BBC is not necessaril­y pro-labour, but its assumption­s are those of middleclas­s liberals. Look at its coverage of poverty. Judging by its output, anyone would think that Britain is a country comprised solely of billionair­es and the very poor: the interests of the majority in the middle are rarely taken into account. On food banks, the BBC makes out as if they are a peculiarly British phenomenon, forced on people by a wicked Tory government. There are food banks in virtually every country in Europe, but you won’t see that pointed out by BBC producers whose middle-class guilt complex permeates their output.

Suggest that it is capitalism that has lifted poor people all over the world out of poverty and it’s a quick: “Sorry, Mr Dale, we don’t think that particular documentar­y idea is right for our audience.” Why? Because they commission programmes for “people like us”. Perish the thought that the kind of person in Bassetlaw who voted Tory last week should be catered for.

Does the BBC think those of us on the Right haven’t noticed? No minister has appeared on the Radio 4 Today programme this week and that boycott looks likely to continue. Such is the frustratio­n with a programme that seemingly relishes a barney over Brexit or obsessive analysis of niche subjects of interest only to liberal urban types rather than a proper examinatio­n of policies that affect real people,

No 10 has decided enough is enough.

The Tories won’t be missing much. If the PM does a series of interviews with a dozen or so local radio stations, he can reach Mr & Mrs Normal in a way the Today programme never can. In this multi-channel world, no single programme has an entitlemen­t any longer. There are other outlets to go to. Yet BBC shows continue to think as they did in the three-channel era.

On my LBC show I’ve been talking to real voters for the past two years. You pick up trends quickly. I realised the flaws in the implementa­tion of universal credit when three grown men in a row broke down in tears during a phone-in. The BBC, however, has been stuck in its bubble, incapable of looking beyond the narrow horizons of the London middle classes.

It cannot afford to continue the way it is. The media landscape is shifting beneath its feet, and viewers and listeners will not put up with this behaviour indefinite­ly. Will it adapt to the times and realise the scale of its failures? Might it even be proactive and put forward its own proposals to replace the outdated licence fee, before the Government gets there first? I won’t hold my breath.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom