The Guardian (USA)

Piers Morgan to leave Good Morning Britain after Meghan row

- Mark Sweney

Piers Morgan has quit as co-host of ITV’s breakfast show Good Morning Britain after critical remarks he made about the Duchess of Sussex’s mental health prompted an on-air row with a colleague and an Ofcom investigat­ion.

Pressure had mounted on Morgan since he made the comments on Monday’s edition of the show, which followed the airing of Meghan and Prince Harry’s tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey in the US on Sunday night.

The Guardian understand­s that a formal complaint was lodged with ITV on behalf of the duchess after the broadcast.

By early evening on Tuesday, Ofcom had received more than 41,000 complaints about Morgan’s behaviour, prompting the broadcasti­ng regulator to launch an investigat­ion into whether his comments broke the UK broadcasti­ng code relating to harm and offence.

Just a couple of hour later, ITV released a statement saying: “Following discussion­s with ITV, Piers Morgan has decided now is the time to leave Good Morning Britain. ITV has accepted this decision and has nothing further to add.”

In Winfrey’s interview, Meghan detailed how her mental health had deteriorat­ed while she was pregnant amid a barrage of negative press and lack of support from “the firm” – the apparatus surroundin­g the royal household – which had repeatedly turned down her appeals for help and discourage­d her from leaving the house for months.

“It was all happening just because

I was breathing,” Meghan said, breaking down in tears during the interview, which was broadcast on ITV on Monday night. “I just didn’t want to be alive any more. That was a clear, real, frightenin­g and constant thought.”

She told Winfrey she had asked to go somewhere to get help with these suicidal thoughts, but was told it would not look good by one of the most senior people in the institutio­n of the monarchy.

Morgan questioned on Monday’s edition of GMB whether she was telling the truth. “Who did you go to?” he said. “What did they say to you? I’m sorry, I don’t believe a word she said, Meghan Markle. I wouldn’t believe it if she read me a weather report.”

The remarks provoked a backlash, and it is understood that ITV executives wanted Morgan to apologise for them on-air. During Tuesday’s programme Morgan said: “When we talked about this yesterday, I said as an all-encompassi­ng thing I don’t believe what Meghan Markle is saying generally in this interview, and I still have serious concerns about the veracity of a lot of what she said.

“But let me just state on the record my position about mental illness and on suicide. These are clearly extremely serious things that should be taken extremely seriously, and if someone is feeling that way they should get the treatment and help they need every time.”

On the same show, Morgan stormed off set after a discussion about Meghan with his colleague Alex Beresford. The weather presenter defended the couple, telling Morgan: “I understand you’ve got a personal relationsh­ip with Meghan Markle, or had one, and she cut you off. She’s entitled to cut you off if she wants to. Has she said anything about you since she cut you off? I don’t think she has but yet you continue to trash her.”

As Beresford continued, Morgan got up and stormed out of the studio, saying: “OK, I’m done with this, sorry, no, can’t do this.” Beresford called his behaviour “pathetic” and “diabolical”, while co-host, Susanna Reid, was forced to send the show to an early break.

Beresford later tweeted of the discussion, in which he had also shared some of his own experience­s of racism: “I wish I had the privilege to sit on the fence. In order for me to do that I would have to strip myself of my identity and that’s not something I can do. It’s not any of our places to pick apart claims of racism in order to make us to feel more comfortabl­e.”

ITV’s chief executive, Dame Carolyn McCall, subsequent­ly said the row was not “manufactur­ed”.

McCall added that ITV’s managing director of media and entertainm­ent, Kevin Lygo, had been in discussion with Morgan in recent days regarding his coverage of the Harry and Meghan interview. She said Good Morning Britain was a balanced show, adding: “ITV has many voices and we try and represent many voices every day. It’s not about one opinion.”

Among those reacting to Morgan’s exit from GMB, where he has been co-host since 2015, was Lorraine Kelly, who presents the 9am show on ITV that follows it. She told the BBC’s The One Show that Morgan had only just emailed her to break the news and said she had “no real details”.

“It’s certainly going to be quieter,” she said. “We all wish him well … Like I say, it will be calmer.”

Piers Morgan tweeted late on Tuesday: “Thinking of my late, great manager John Ferriter tonight. He’d have told me to do exactly the same thing. @GMB #TrustYourG­ut” In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123 or by emailing jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other internatio­nal helplines can be found at www.befriender­s.org.

At least 39 migrants have drowned off Tunisia when two boats capsized, the defence ministry has said, as numbers risking the dangerous crossing to Europe continued to rise.

Rescuers pulled 165 survivors from the foundering boats to safety on Tuesday.

Defence ministry spokesman Mohamed Zekri said later that the search had been “temporaril­y suspended due to nightfall and bad weather”.

It was not immediatel­y clear what caused both boats to capsize, but vessels leaving the north African coast for Europe are often heavily overloaded makeshift crafts, departing at night even in rough weather to avoid detection from the coastguard.

The defence ministry said 39 bodies had been retrieved, while Tunisian National Guard spokesman Houcem Eddine Jebabli said at least nine women and four children had died.

The boats left shore overnight carrying mainly migrants from sub-Saharan Africa aiming to reach Europe, but they were spotted by the coastguard off the Tunisian port of Sfax, according to the authoritie­s.

Last year saw an upsurge of makeshift boats attempting to cross the central Mediterran­ean, the deadliest route for would-be migrants to Europe.

Such vessels have continued to take to the sea almost daily this year, despite frequent poor weather.

“Departures have continued to rise,” said Romdhane Ben Amor of the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights.

Since the beginning of 2021, 94 migrant boats have been intercepte­d, according to a count kept by his organisati­on, against 47 in the same period in 2020.

Meanwhile, 1,736 people have been arrested for attempting the crossing, around double the number in the same period last year.

Between 1 January and 7 March, 5,685 migrants arrived on Italian coasts illegally by sea, according to the UN refugee agency, including more than 1,500 via Tunisia, and 3,500 via neighbouri­ng Libya.

The figures are more than double those from the same period last year.

Among illegal arrivals in Italy during 2020, Tunisian citizens constitute­d the biggest national contingent, numbering 12,000, UNHCR said.

But many foreign nationals have also used Tunisia as a jumping off point for Europe.

Since the start of 2021, over half of migrants arrested in waters off Tunisia were from sub-Saharan Africa, according to the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights.

Tunisia had been struck by an economic crisis and high unemployme­nt even before the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Job losses, precarious conditions that have hit Tunisians have hit foreign migrant communitie­s even harder; many have lost their jobs,” said Matt Herbert from the Global Initiative Against Transnatio­nal Organized Crime.

“For some migrants based in Tunisia, migrating to Europe is a decision

they already have at the back of their mind.”

According to the UN, at least 252 migrants have died in the Mediterran­ean since 1 January, and around 1,200 perished last year.

 ?? Photograph: Mario Anzuoni/Reuters ?? Piers Morgan, who has decided to leave Good Morning Britain.
Photograph: Mario Anzuoni/Reuters Piers Morgan, who has decided to leave Good Morning Britain.
 ??  ?? The hospital in Sfax province, south-east Tunisia. It was coastguard­s in the port of Sfax who spotted the overloaded boats. Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shuttersto­ck
The hospital in Sfax province, south-east Tunisia. It was coastguard­s in the port of Sfax who spotted the overloaded boats. Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shuttersto­ck

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