So, let's get this straight - a tweet inviting comparison between the language used by a German government in the 1930s and certain politicians either in the current UK government or part of the governing party has caused outrage, some of which may be genuine, in certain circles. The outrage appears to be generated by a well-known football commentator who happens to appear on BBC TV shows, although he is not a member of their staff. Said commentator was venting his own views, but the expression of those views is somehow considered inappropriate, or 'out of order' by somebody of such a high profile by various unbiased people such as Suella Braverman, Daily Mail journalists, GB News and now, seemingly, Tim Davie the BBC Director-General and former Conservative Party politician.
I invite anyone to consider the irony of attempting to disprove the allegation of similarity to an oppressive and, ultimately, totalitarian regime by suppressing the right of an individual to air those views by, in effect, depriving them of their job.
The irony is you didn't see the disconnect between these two contradictory statements.
Gary Lineker's job, such that it is, is to be a contractor who provides a service to the BBC and thus abides by their policies as a contractor.
The services he provides are football commentary, and as of 2020, commentary on the human rights record of Qatar, as part of a BBC Sports programme watched by millions, if not billions. The latter was evidently his choice, and he has no doubt reaped commercial benefit off the back of it.
No amount of sophistry will enable Lineker to ever claim he is just some random shmoe whose political views don't matter and whose BBC and non-BBC output can be so easily divorced from one another.
But Lineker is entitled to hold and express the opinion he does, and if he believes it is similar to the techniques the Nazis used I don't see any issue with pointing that out. We should be debating it and if he's wrong, explaining why. Often comparing to the Nazis is intellectually lazy, but equally we should be in a situation where we can learn from what the Nazis did and never do it again, so I don't agree that we should never be doing it. Pointing out parallels and similarities from history is a very useful thing to do.
Herein lies the problem.
I am almost certain one of the techniques used by the Nazis was to get high profile Germans who were considered to be of sufficient racial purity, to speak in favour of the German race laws, and condemn in the most unParliamentary language, the inferiority of the Jews etc. Naturally, they had no doctorates and held no political office. They were just famous Germans.
There's inevitably always some way to show that even the most saintly of people, are acting remarkably like Nazis.
All you need is a talent for ignoring any sense of decency and a keen desire to destroy your target's credibility. In other words, a very large aversion to impartiality.
Would those members (not just the two quoted) who believe that this was the correct decision, also be backing that stance if Lineker had tweeted in support of the government's plans?
You can be sure that the majority of the voices who had been calling for the BBC to do something would have remained quiet on the matter if he had.
This isn't (ironically) a fair presentation of the problem.
You're effectively asking, for the purposes of argument, would anyone have cared if Mr. Lineker had tweeted his admiration of the responsible and measured language used by the government to justify their new migrant policy? How it reminded him of the glory days of Attlee and Bevin.
With the problem fairly restated to test how neutrality works if the tables are turned, then yes, I hope it is now
extremely obvious that if Mr. Lineker had sent out such a Tweet, there would have been an enormous reaction, with people doing the exact same thing, just from the opposite aisle, asking (demanding) to know how it could possibly be that the supposedly neutral BBC is not doing anything about this famous presenter and his offensive opinions on matters he should ruddy well not have an opinion on while he is being paid by my licence fee. (or straight up just calling him crazy koo koo, and get him fired that way).
Andrew Neil and Lord Sugar have made political/opinionated tweets while working for the BBC in the past and no-one batted an eyelid then. Either discipline everyone, or no-one, not some selective process like now.
As has already been pointed out, Neil's ability to be impartial when it matters, is well known. And unlike Lineker, it's highly unlikely that Neil was being watched by anyone who didn't already know their own mind, or Neil's personal views. Lineker reaches the youth and the undecided, allegedly (wildly inaccurate claims in both respects imho).
It is ironic to keep bringing up Neil anyway, because he was effectively forced out of the BBC because they refused to accommodate his not unreasonable request for more sociable hours given his advancing years, and move his very popular late night show to the early evening. It was widely seen as an underhand means for the BBC to get an old white expensive dude off the airwaves, in favour of some diversity. His slot was duly filled by a podcast hosted by Laura Kuunsberg, who has famously also had to leave the BBC since because it was becoming rather obvious she had strong opinions and was letting that affect the perceived impartiality of her role as a political correspondent.
Lord Sugar is a very different case. He is a Lord, obviously, so the situation you are effectively proposing, is that no politicians can have non-political presenting roles in the BBC. That is obviously wrong, another clear sign of the backward trajectory where we seem to want our politicians to have absolutely no real world experience at all.
And this is all ignoring the fact that if Linekers only defence is "what about X/Y/Z, they breach too?", he has no defence. Pun intended.