Shaw S Hunter
Established Member
ISTM that the real issue here has nothing to do with a vaguely political tweet by a popular sports broadcaster. It's much more about the way in which governments in this country, having won not just initial election but subsequently achieving re-election, start to believe that the BBC should automatically, and without question, act as cheerleaders for that government. It certainly happened in the later years of the regimes of both Thatcher and Blair, and has been plainly evident ever since Johnson became PM. The difference now is that the government has succeeded in getting its own favoured people into very senior positions in the BBC and is using those people to bring pressure on BBC broadcast staff to toe the government line.
It should surely be the case in a functioning democracy that the media generally appraises government actions critically and calls it out when necessary, especially if the opposition is weak and disorganised. Unfortunately the number of media outlets prepared to do just that is slowly but surely dwindling. What concerns me very much is that if the Conservatives get re-elected the BBC will be privatised and any remaining semblance of balanced coverage, however ham-fisted it may be at times, will be eliminated.
It should surely be the case in a functioning democracy that the media generally appraises government actions critically and calls it out when necessary, especially if the opposition is weak and disorganised. Unfortunately the number of media outlets prepared to do just that is slowly but surely dwindling. What concerns me very much is that if the Conservatives get re-elected the BBC will be privatised and any remaining semblance of balanced coverage, however ham-fisted it may be at times, will be eliminated.