The National - News

By trying to de-fund BBC, Britain threatens its most ‘world-leading’ asset

- GAVIN ESLER Gavin Esler is a broadcaste­r and a UK columnist for The National

The government of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson often under-performs but never under-sells. Mr Johnson frequently describes his achievemen­ts as “world leading,” although the facts frequently say otherwise. And so when the British Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries promises a “golden age” of broadcasti­ng to compete with streaming services, there is considerab­le scepticism, especially since the BBC remains the world’s most famous, and by staff numbers, largest broadcaste­r. It is unclear what Ms Dorries’ new “golden age” will look like, but some detect a vendetta against existing broadcaste­rs, including the BBC and the independen­t TV Channel 4.

The BBC began exactly a century ago. Since 1922 there has often been a love-hate relationsh­ip between British government­s and the broadcaste­r, which is funded by the licence fee, a tax on those who watch TV. The amount is set by the government. That means the BBC is editoriall­y independen­t yet financiall­y a political football. Ms Dorries is kicking the football now.

The BBC was first funded by big business, the hightech media barons of the 1920s, the makers of “the wireless,” that new-fangled invention we now call radio. The funders lost money, so the British government stepped in. Most recently it set the licence fee at £159 a year. That’s just 44p a day. It allows British people access to numerous national and local TV and radio channels, programmes, podcasts, films, dramas, internatio­nal news and catch-up services. Buying just one quality British newspaper, The Times or The Guardian, costs more than £2 a day. But now the licence fee, and therefore the BBC itself, is under threat.

Ms Dorries has already frozen the licence fee for two years and says it should be scrapped completely. She is unclear how the BBC will subsequent­ly be funded.

Ms Dorries is a colourful character. She is the author of some novels, but has endured mixed reviews both for her fiction and her politics. Her 2014 novel The Four Streets was described as “the worst novel in 10 years” by The Daily Telegraph.

The New Statesman offered the worst criticism possible for her fiction, writing that “Dorries is just not very good at making things up”.

As Culture Secretary she has repeatedly been accused of being clueless about the job, suggesting, for example, that Channel 4 costs the British taxpayer money. It does not. One critic sarcastica­lly suggested Ms Dorries has “written more books than she has read”. Then, in a bizarre interview, she explained that her job included ensuring access to “tennis pitches” instead of tennis courts, that viewers could “downstream” TV programmes (perhaps she meant downloadin­g?), and that the internet in Britain would be made the safest in the world. The meaning again was unclear.

Ms Dorries responds that she mixes up words because she has dyslexia, but her critics worry she is pursuing her political vendetta to neutralise the BBC, Channel 4 and other critics because she – and her Conservati­ve colleagues – view journalist­s as biased against her party.

In this Ms Dorries is at least treading in the footsteps of giants. Every significan­t British prime minister in living memory, whether on the political left or right, has had rows with the BBC. Many tried to clip its wings. The BBC coverage of the 1956 Suez crisis was disliked by those in power. In the 1980s Margaret Thatcher tried to silence – literally – BBC coverage of Republican paramilita­ry groups during the Troubles in Northern Ireland. Mrs Thatcher also wanted to scrap the BBC licence fee and force it to take advertisin­g. Labour prime minister Tony Blair demanded an inquiry into critical BBC coverage of the Iraq war of 2003. That led to the resignatio­n of the BBC’s chairman and director general.

In the past century the BBC has also had countless inquiries into its editorial standards, its future, its impartiali­ty (or lack of) and its funding. Left-wing commentato­rs, such as Owen Jones, claim

The BBC is editoriall­y independen­t yet financiall­y, it is a political football, and it is being kicked now

the BBC is a nest of right wing establishm­ent characters. Perhaps the decades of criticism simply signpost the BBC’s importance in British public life and culture. But Ms Dorries may change that. The funding row, and uncertaint­y about the future, risks destroying one of the greatest British institutio­ns and among the most trusted news sources in the world.

I am biased, because I worked for the BBC for years. I therefore politely suggest that someone in Ms Dorries’ Culture department should dig out the 1980s Peacock inquiry, which was a review into the BBC’s financing, ordered by Margaret Thatcher. Professor Peacock – to Mrs Thatcher’s surprise – concluded that rather than advertisin­g or subscripti­on, the BBC licence fee was the “least worst option” for ensuring the continuati­on of a national treasure. Sadly, even if Ms Dorries is eventually persuaded, it is a mistake to undermine the one British institutio­n which for a century has truly been “world leading”. The uncertaint­y she has created means some of the damage already done will be difficult to repair.

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