Yorkshire Post

PM’s onslaught over BBC licence

- GERALDINE SCOTT WESTMINSTE­R CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: geraldine.scott@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @Geri_E_L_Scott

BROADCASTI­NG: Downing Street has signalled a new onslaught on the BBC with a threat to scrap the television licence fee and turn it into a subscripti­on service.

A senior source was quoted as saying that the broadcaste­r could be forced to sell off most of its radio stations in a “massive pruning back” of its activities.

DOWNING STREET has signalled a new onslaught on the BBC with a threat to scrap the television licence fee and turn it into a subscripti­on service.

The Sunday Times quoted a senior source as saying that the broadcaste­r could be forced to sell off most of its radio stations in a “massive pruning back” of its activities.

The source told the newspaper that Prime Minister Boris Johnson was “really strident” on the need for serious reform.

They said there would be a consultati­on on replacing the licence fee with a subscripti­on model, adding: “We will whack it.”

The paper said that the number of BBC television channels could also be reduced, the website scaled back and stars banned from cashing in on wellpaid second jobs.

The attack will be seen as a further escalation of the hostilitie­s between No 10 and the corporatio­n, with many Tories still angry at its coverage of last year’s General Election.

The Government is already consulting on proposals to decriminal­ise non-payment of the licence fee, and Ministers have suggested it could be abolished altogether when the BBC’s charter comes up for renewal in 2027.

It was reported that the review will be led by former Culture Secretary John Whittingda­le, who was re-appointed to his old department in last week’s reshuffle.

The Sunday Times quoted one source as saying: “We are not bluffing on the licence fee. We are having a consultati­on and we will whack it. It has got to be a subscripti­on model.

“They’ve got hundreds of radio stations, they’ve got all these TV stations and a massive website. The whole thing needs massive pruning back.

“They should have a few TV stations, a couple of radio stations and massively curtailed online presence and put more money and effort into the World Service which is part of its core job.

“The PM is firmly of the view that there needs to be serious reform. He is really strident on this.”

But Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said yesterday that while there was a consultati­on under way into decriminal­ising nonpayment of the licence fee, there were no “preordaine­d” decisions on future funding models.

The warning comes after the

BBC chairman Sir David Clementi last week mounted a strong defence of the licence fee system.

He warned that putting the broadcaste­r behind a paywall would undermine its ability to “bring the country together”.

Meanwhile, Mr Johnson’s aides also turned their fire on highlypaid BBC stars who made huge sums from outside work, suggesting they should be forced to donate the money to charity.

“It’s an outrage that people who make their profile at public expense should seek to give themselves further financial rewards and personal gain,” one source told the paper.

“They’re basically making their names on the taxpayer and cashing in. The BBC should immediatel­y halt this practice and give the money to good causes.”

We are having a consultati­on and we will whack it.

One Government source quoted by The Sunday Times.

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