Donald Trump has threatened legal action against the BBC over a Panorama documentary which edited one of his speeches.
According to BBC News, the US President has sent a letter after it emerged more than 500 complaints have been lodged in response to an editing scandal involving him.
BBC chairman Samir Shah has today apologised for an ‘error of judgment’ and said the BBC accepts Mr Trump’s speech was edited to ‘give the impression of a direct call for violent action’ before the US Capitol attack on January 6.
It comes as director-general Tim Davie and Deborah Turness, chief executive of BBC News, quit last night following a series of scandals at the corporation.
An impartiality row has rocked the national broadcaster after an internal report accused it of bias, censorship and doctoring footage of Mr Trump.
The corporation has also come into the firing line over its reports of the war in Gaza and transgender issues.
Follow the latest updates and reaction
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Explained: Why Donald Trump is threatening to sue the BBC
I do not know that yet, but he’s a litigious fellow so we should be prepared for all outcomes.
Breaking:Donald Trump threatens legal action against BBC
Shah – BBC has no ‘anti-Israel bias’
It’s disrespectful to BBC journalists up and down the country, across the world, to characterise them because of a mistake.
Shah – I did not want to lose Tim Davie
I did not want to lose Tim Davie, I think Tim Davie has been an outstanding director-general, and may I say, nor did any member of the board.
We were upset by the decision, I do understand it at a very human level, Tim has gone through a lot of attacks, it’s been relentless.
It’s also a very, very difficult job to join, the BBC is a huge, massive enterprise, and asks a lot of the director-general in terms of just his physical resilience and also emotional, and I do think it’s a characteristic, I would say, that we really do enjoy beating people up.
Top story: Civil war at the BBC as ‘woke pro-trans staff’ rebel against board
Downing Street hits back at claims BBC is ‘corrupt’ and ‘institutionally biased’
On the question of is the BBC corrupt?: No. The BBC has a vital role in an age of disinformation… where there’s a clear argument for a robust, impartial British news service to deliver, and that case is stronger than ever.
I think I’ve already addressed some of the comments that have been made over the last 24 hours, but we are of the view that it’s important that the BBC acts swiftly to maintain trust and correct mistakes quickly when they occur.
No, but it is important that the BBC acts to maintain trust and correct mistakes quickly when they occur, because as I say, for any public service broadcaster, accountability is vital to maintain trust.
Shah – I don’t know if Trump is suing the BBC
‘Trump concerns relayed to Panorama but formal action would have been better’
The points raised in the review were relayed to the Panorama team, including the decision making on this edit. With hindsight, it would have been better to take more formal action.
Samir Shah says claims BBC looked to ‘bury’ issues is ‘simply not true’
There is another view that has gained currency in the coverage that the BBC has done nothing to tackle these problems. That is also simply not true.
Breaking:Samir Shah – BBC made error of judgment over Donald Trump documentary
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Nigel Farage – I’ve spoken to Trump about ‘institutionally biased’ BBC
I actually spoke to the president on Friday. He just said to me: ‘Is this how you treat your best ally? It’s quite a powerful comment.
If the BBC doesn’t now get a grip, get somebody in from the outside, somebody who has got a history and a culture of changing organisations, of turning them around, then I think what you would see within the next couple of years are many, many millions just refusing, just not wanting to have the license fee.
Lib Dems call on party leaders to back BBC against Donald Trump
It should be extremely concerning to us all to see the President of the United States pressuring the BBC over its leadership and attacking its journalists as ‘corrupt’, and his Press Secretary telling everyone to ‘watch GB News’.
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I think that those members of the board who want to be on the board, as it were, non-executive directors, ought each and every one of them come up for parliamentary scrutiny and be made to sing for their supper before they’re appointed, because we know too little about them.
Labour MPs back BBC as ‘beacon of truth’
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Breaking:Deborah Turness – BBC is not institutionally biased
I would like to say it has been the privilege of my career to serve as the CEO of BBC News and to work with our brilliant team of journalists. I stepped down over the weekend because the buck stops with me. But I’d like to make one thing very clear, BBC News is not institutionally biased. That’s why it’s the world’s most trusted news provider.
Starmer silent as Labour MPs prop up BBC following Trump rant
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Huw Edwards, Gaza and Gregg Wallace: All the BBC scandals on Tim Davie’s watch
Tim Davie was ‘effective leader but very slow to act’, says CMS chairwoman
I’m very sad about Tim Davie stepping down. I think he was an effective leader at the BBC. I think he was a great champion for public service media, but there is no escaping the fact that he was very slow to act on this particular issue. But this isn’t the first time and on this particular issue, Michael Prescott’s report, he just didn’t take it seriously until it was too late.
He should have reacted with concern and examined the claims, but just ignored it.
Watch: Moment BBC newsreader announces Tim Davie and Deborah Turness have quit
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Ex-Fleet Street editors share differing views over BBC impartiality crisis
First thing you have to do is admit you’re wrong instead of trying to defend yourself in this ridiculous way. All the BBC bias goes in one direction… the memo goes, it could go much, much further, but it’s about trans issues, identity, race, (US President Donald) Trump, Israel, Gaza… it’s always from a sort of metropolitan, left position absolutely consistently. That’s how the bias is.
It was a coup, and worse than that, it was an inside job. There were people inside the BBC, very close to the board, very close to the, on the board, who have systematically undermined Tim Davie and his senior team over a period of (time) and this has been going on for a long time. What happened yesterday didn’t just happen in isolation.
Trump launches new broadside at ‘corrupt’ BBC journalists
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