The Scotsman

Ofcom rap for Neil’s ‘illiterate’ Scots claim

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

The BBC’S Sunday Politics show breached broadcasti­ng rules with misleading claims made by presenter Andrew Neil, a watchdog has found.

The host claimed during an interview with former SNP leader Alex Salmond that “after a decade of SNP rule, one in five Scots pupils leave primary school functional­ly illiterate”.

Media watchdog Ofcom has found that his statistica­l claim was not accurate or based on any official source.

The BBC has been found to have breached broadcasti­ng rules after politics presenter Andrew Neil claimed Scottish school children were “illiterate” in an interview with former first minister Alex Salmond.

The Sunday Politics host claimed during a 2017 interview with Mr Salmond that “after a decade of SNP rule, one in five Scots pupils leave primary school functional­ly illiterate”.

Media watchdog Ofcom has found his statistica­l claim was not accurate or based on any official source.

Following a complaint about the false statistic, an investigat­ion found the claim misled viewers during the build-up to elections in 2017.

Neil said his claim was “all too credible, even if not exactly accurate, as I now realise”.

It was also found the BBC attempted to find a source to back up Neil’s inaccurate claim before conceding it was inaccurate and had no basis.

Ofcom is “greatly concerned” at the BBC’S handling of the complaint and the time taken to admit the error.

A spokeswoma­n for Ofcom said: “We expect the BBC to take careful note of its errors in the handling of this case to ensure they don’t recur.

“The length of time it took the BBC to admit there was no factual source to support the statement made in this programme was deeply unsatisfac­tory.

“We expect better standards from the BBC, both in its handling of viewer complaints and in its interactio­ns with Ofcom.”

Neil conducted an interview with former Scottish first minister Salmond in 2017 ahead of the local elections in Scotland and a UK general election.

He asked the politician: “If services have been so well protected, why, after a decade of SNP rule, do one in five Scots pupils leave primary school functional­ly illiterate?”

Neil then repeated: “Why are one in five functional­ly illiterate?”

This, Ofcom has ruled, gave a “false impression that Mr Neil’s question was founded on an establishe­d fact or source”.

The BBC’S subsequent handling of the complaint has also been criticised by Ofcom.

The watchdog found not only was the claim unfounded, but the BBC has erroneousl­y pointed to sources to try and give it some factual basis, and offered “conflictin­g explanatio­ns on the source from which Mr Neil’s statement was derived”. The BBC also pointed to the fact that First Minister Nicola Sturgeon did not rebut the statistic in a Scottish parliament­ary debate as backing their case that it was not materially misleading.

 ??  ?? 0 Andrew Neil was criticised by the media watchdog Ofcom over a question he put to former first minister Alex Salmond in 2017
0 Andrew Neil was criticised by the media watchdog Ofcom over a question he put to former first minister Alex Salmond in 2017

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