The Guardian (USA)

Richard Sharp resigns as BBC chair after failing to declare link to Boris Johnson loan

- Jim Waterson Media editor

Richard Sharp has resigned as BBC chair after he breached the rules on public appointmen­ts by failing to declare his connection to a secret £800,000 loan made to Boris Johnson.

Sharp quit on Friday morning after concluding his continued presence at the BBC “may well be a distractio­n from the corporatio­n’s good work”.

An investigat­ion by the UK commission­er of public appointmen­ts concluded Sharp had broken the rules by failing to declare his link to Johnson’s loan, creating a “potential perceived conflict of interest”.

The investigat­ion also found that Johnson – when he was prime minister – had personally approved Sharp’s appointmen­t as BBC chair, while the individual­s running the supposedly independen­t recruitmen­t process for the job had already been informed that Sharp was the only candidate whom the government would support.

Although this breach of the rules does not necessaril­y invalidate an appointmen­t, Sharp said his position was no longer tenable and he had to quit. He intends to step down at a board meeting in June, at which point an acting chair will be appointed. Rishi Sunak’s government will then start recruitmen­t process to find a full-time successor.

Earlier this year, the Sunday Times revealed that Sharp had secretly helped an acquaintan­ce, Sam Blyth, who wanted to offer an £800,000 personal loan guarantee for Johnson. The prime minister’s personal finances were in poor shape while he was in Downing Street with his new wife, Carrie, and baby son, and was going through an expensive divorce.

Sharp decided to introduce Blyth to Simon Case, the head of the civil service, so they could discuss a potential loan. But the BBC chair insists he took no further role and there is no evidence “to say I played any part whatsoever in the facilitati­on, arrangemen­t, or financing of a loan for the former prime minister”.

He added that he did not realise he had to declare the introducti­on during the recruitmen­t process for the BBC job, saying: “I have always maintained the breach was inadverten­t.”

It is still not known who ultimately provided Johnson with the loan, which became public only after he left office.

Sharp’s resignatio­n comes at a tricky time for the BBC, which has been hit by criticisms it has become too close to the Conservati­ve government – and faces questions over whether it has been too heavily influenced by ministers.

Labour’s Lucy Powell said the incident had “caused untold damage to the reputation of the BBC and seriously undermined its independen­ce as a result of the Conservati­ves’ sleaze and cronyism”.

She added: “Rishi Sunak should urgently establish a truly independen­t and robust process to replace Sharp to help restore the esteem of the BBC after his government has tarnished it so much.”

The investigat­ion into Sharp’s appointmen­t was particular­ly damning on the way the applicatio­n process for the job was handled. Other candidates were put off from putting forward their names for the BBC job by the perception it was already lined for Sharp. Government-friendly media outlets were briefed that Sharp was the government’s preferred candidate for the job before the applicatio­n window had even closed.

“Leaks and briefing to the press of ‘preferred candidates’ for public appointmen­ts (referred to as ‘pre-briefing’) should be prohibited by ministers,” the report concluded. “In this case such pre-briefing may well have discourage­d people from applying for this role. It can also undermine efforts made to increase diversity.”

MPs had already criticised Sharp, a financier and Tory donor, for “significan­t errors of judgment” in failing to declare the potential conflict of interest.

Sharp told MPs he had been attending a private dinner at Blyth’s house in September 2020 when the Canadian businessma­n said he had read reports that Johnson was in “some difficulti­es” and that he wanted to help. Sharp said he had warned Blyth about the ethical complexiti­es of this.

At the time, Sharp was working in Downing Street on Covid projects, and told Johnson and Sunak of his aim to be BBC chair. He told the culture, media and sport committee in February: “I communicat­ed to the prime minister and to the chancellor that I wished to apply and submitted my applicatio­n in November.”

The government will now be able to select a new BBC chair on a fouryear term, depriving a potential Labour government of making its own appointmen­t until late 2027.

The part-time position involves overseeing the BBC’s operations and managing relationsh­ips with the government.

In his resignatio­n statement, Sharp said that “for all its complexiti­es, successes, and occasional failings, the BBC is an incredible, dynamic, and worldbeati­ng creative force, unmatched anywhere”.

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