The Herald on Sunday

Dimbleby questions Maitlis ‘polemic’ on BBC’s Newsnight

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DAVID Dimbleby has said Emily Maitlis’ mistake was to deliver her Newsnight monologue as a “polemic”.

The former Question Time host, 83, also dismissed the suggestion there is a “cabal” of Conservati­ve supporters in the governorsh­ip of the BBC.

Maitlis, who left the BBC this year, used the MacTaggart Lecture at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal TV Festival this week to claim the corporatio­n had “sought to pacify” Number 10 by issuing a swift apology following her 2020 segment about Dominic Cummings’s lockdown trip to Durham.

The broadcaste­r received more than 20,000 complaints and ruled Maitlis and the Newsnight team breached impartiali­ty rules, saying in a statement: “We believe the introducti­on we broadcast did not meet our standards of due impartiali­ty.”

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today, Dimbleby said: “First of all, the words she spoke had, she said, been approved by the editorial team at Newsnight so it wasn’t just Emily that was rebuked by the BBC. It was the team. The second thing I would say is that the things she said I think should have been questions, not statements.

“‘The country can see that Cummings broke the rule, it is shocked the Government cannot’. Well, not everybody may have been shocked. ‘The public mood is one of fury, contempt and anguish’. Well, maybe, but that is a question to put. It was a polemic. I think that was the mistake.”

Dimbleby said he personally did not feel like a fool, as the monologue claimed many in the country did, but instead felt “very cross” with Mr Cummings, who was then Boris Johnson’s chief adviser.

Referring to Maitlis’ claim the BBC had rebuked the Newsnight team in response to a complaint from the Government, he added: “I don’t actually think that the call from Number 10 the next morning (had any effect).

“There is a call from Number 10 every bloody morning of the week.

“Whoever is in power, there always are. Look at Alastair Campbell – never ever gave up on the BBC when Labour was in office.”

In a reference to Theresa May’s former communicat­ions director Sir Robbie Gibb, Maitlis said during her lecture: “Put this in the context of the BBC board, where another active agent of the Conservati­ve party – former Downing Street spin doctor and former adviser to BBC rival GB News – now sits, acting as the arbiter of BBC impartiali­ty.”

Jess Brammar, former editorin-chief of HuffPost UK and acting editor of Newsnight, was confirmed as the BBC’s executive news editor of news channels last year. However, her impartiali­ty was questioned after old tweets emerged in which she was critical of Brexit and Mr Johnson.

Labour then called for Sir Robbie to be sacked from the board of the BBC after claims he tried to block her hiring on political grounds.

Dimbleby said: “It is up to the chairman of the BBC – who admittedly is a Conservati­ve supporter – to monitor what that board does, and Robbie Gibb, who is the person you are talking about, clearly I think did put it about that he didn’t think a particular appointmen­t to the news division was right because of tweets that Jess Brammar had written.

“The interestin­g point about this is that Jess Brammar was appointed ...

“They say in return that Muriel Gray is there, who is a Labour supporter, so it is tricky. I don’t think it is true that there is a kind of cabal in the governorsh­ip of the BBC of Tory supporters.”

 ?? ?? Veteran broadcaste­r David Dimbleby points to ‘mistake’ by Maitlis
Veteran broadcaste­r David Dimbleby points to ‘mistake’ by Maitlis

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