Daily Mail

This Week is axed after Andrew Neil calls it quits

- By Katherine Rushton Media and Technology Editor

TO MANY viewers, he was a breath of fresh air challengin­g the BBC’s political correctnes­s.

But yesterday the corporatio­n said it will axe Andrew Neil’s This Week politics show, following his resignatio­n.

The show, which is broadcast after Question Time on Thursdays, will remain on screens until July. But BBC bosses said they would not bring it back without Mr Neil, pictured, to anchor it.

Fran Unsworth, director of news, said: ‘We couldn’t imagine This Week without the inimitable Andrew Neil, one of Britain’s best political interviewe­rs. After 16 years, Andrew is bowing out of late-night presenting on the show, at the top of his game.’

Mr Neil, 69, told bosses he no longer wanted to work such late nights. He will continue to front Politics Live on Thursdays and the BBC said it will keep him ‘at the heart’ of its political coverage.

But many of his fans will be sad to see the end of This Week, which had attracted a loyal following.

The show made an unlikely comic duo out of former Tory MP Michael Portillo and Labour’s Diane Abbott, who frequently reduced each other to giggles with their exchanges.

Mr Neil, a former editor of The Sunday Times, is known for mixing combative interviews with on-screen banter. He also has a reputation for telling it like it is, even if it horrifies the BBC’s more Leftwing audiences.

Shortly after the Paris terror attack in 2015, he used This Week to launch a 90-second tirade against ‘Islamist scumbags’ and ‘loser jihadists’. Viewers praised it as a ‘magnificen­t’ piece of broadcasti­ng which ‘captured the public mood’.

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