Scottish Daily Mail

BBC revolt over bid to block No10 critic from top job

- By Paul Revoir Media Editor

THE BBC was in revolt last night over a bid to halt the appointmen­t of a senior journalist who has shared Leftwing views on social media.

Sir Robbie Gibb, who was former Tory PM Theresa May’s communicat­ions chief and now sits on the BBC board, is said to have intervened to block Jess Brammar.

It is claimed he feared appointing ex-HuffPost UK editor Miss Brammar as executive news editor – overseeing global and domestic news channels – would damage trust with the Government.

The interventi­on of Sir Robbie, who previously held senior BBC roles, has reportedly stalled the appointmen­t. A senior BBC News source last night told the Mail: ‘It’s a very unwelcome interventi­on – totally inappropri­ate and damaging.’ They claimed Miss Brammar

‘Very unwelcome interventi­on’

was ‘still in play’ for the job. Labour has written to BBC bosses demanding Sir Robbie’s resignatio­n.

Deputy party leader Angela Rayner wrote: ‘Putting pressure on the recruitmen­t process of staff is entirely outside of the remit of the board and a total abuse of position.’ On Twitter she attacked ‘Tory cronyism at the heart of the BBC’.

However, a BBC spokesman stressed no process had been blocked, adding: ‘It is essential that board members can debate and discuss issues. They have an absolute right to do so. What individual board members can’t do is make decisions which are for the executive.’ Hundreds of posts by Miss Brammar – like Sir Robbie, a former deputy editor of Newsnight – have been deleted from Twitter. A source close to her explained they are automatica­lly removed after a month.

But some of her old tweets have emerged, including one which accused Boris Johnson, Donald Trump and Nigel Farage of a ‘sleight of hand’ by persuading people they represente­d ‘outsiders’. In another tweet she claimed there was an ‘influentia­l camp’ at No10 which ‘doesn’t want to reach out to minorities and work with them’. Sir Robbie also reportedly has concerns about the way Miss Brammar handled a row with Treasury Minister Kemi Badenoch when she was UK editor of HuffPost. Last night Tory MP Julian Knight, chairman of the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, described the row as a ‘storm in a teacup’. He said Sir Robbie, the brother of Conservati­ve MP Nick Gibb, was ‘doing his job’ in letting the BBC know ‘where it should think politicall­y in terms of what it does’.

He accused Labour of ‘politicisi­ng’ the situation.

Sir Robbie, pictured, was the head of the BBC’s political programme output, including Daily and Sunday Politics and The Andrew Marr Show, before leaving in 2017 to become Mrs May’s Director of Communicat­ions.

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