The Scotsman

Peston: ‘BBC pulled my indyref report before poll’

● Fear of backlash from First Minister led to decision, journalist claims

- By ADAM SHERWIN newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Robert Peston has claimed that the BBC pulled his report on the economic impact of Scottish independen­ce minutes before broadcast because bosses feared it might offend the First Minister.

Delivering the 2020 Hugh Cudlipp journalism lecture, the ITV News Political Editor accused the BBC of capitulati­ng to political pressure and of confusing balance with impartiali­ty during the Brexit referendum. Peston, who spent nine years at the BBC before switching to its commercial rival, disclosed that he had once been censored by the broadcaste­r. “A couple of days before the Scottish independen­ce referendum in 2014, and just ten minutes before going to air on the Ten O’clock news, a piece I had made on the economic implicatio­ns of Scottish independen­ce was pulled, on the orders of the corporatio­n’s most senior executives, who feared the ire of Alex Salmond.”

Peston, BBC Economics Editor at the time, added: “The least edifying aspect of the incident is that the assorted bosses subsequent­ly rang me to distance themselves from the decision, just in case it leaked and became a cause celebre.”

Peston said the incident demonstrat­ed the “sheer terror” of a political backlash that grips “those who run the BBC” which means it is afraid to “stick its neck out and give a view.” He said he “watched with disappoint­ment the corporatio­n’s coverage of the (Brexit) referendum” which “confused balance with due impartiali­ty.” It was “no service to the BBC’S viewers and listeners to hear one business leader or economist say Brexit would make us poorer, and another say it would make us richer, and then not be given help by presenter or journalist in assessing which was more credible.”

Peston said democracy depended on broadcast news organisati­ons being robust at a time when “our own prime minister has shown a preference for being asked patsy questions by faceless and carefully selected citizens via Facebook.” He warned of No 10’s pledge to shake-up the BBC: “If this or any government is the arbiter of impartiali­ty, we are in deep trouble.”

Peston admitted his mistake during the election when he tweeted a false news story claiming that a Labour activist punched a Tory advisor. But he warned that if any of the public broadcaste­rs “decided to remodel ourselves as Netflixsty­le streaming services, freed from the obligation to provide impartial news, the providers of fake and toxic news would be the only winners.”

 ?? PICTURE; PA ?? 0 Peston warned about the influence of government on broadcaste­rs
PICTURE; PA 0 Peston warned about the influence of government on broadcaste­rs

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