Is the new BBC Chair ‘a friend of the Prime Minister’ and some other Second Thoughts on the week’s media news.

‘Samir Shah’ ..he’s one of our own’.

The positive response in the media to the appointment of Samir Shah as the Government’s preferred choice as the Chair of the BBC can partly be explained by relief that the job is going to a media professional not a politician past his or her prime, ‘someone in the City’ or a known party donor. On Sky News Breakfast I welcomed Samir’s broadcasting experience and the fact that he wasn’t ’a public supporter of any particular political party’ or a known donor . I also pointed out that this government does not like to appoint to public posts anybody they regard as ‘woke’ and that Samir has ‘non-woke credentials’

So I was struck by Roger Bolton’s views in his latest ‘Beebwatch’ podcast about how ‘my old boss Samir Shah is to become the new chair of the BBC’. He explained that for the last 3 years of him presenting ‘Feedback’ on BBC Radio Four the series was made by Samir Shah’s independent production company, Juniper. Samir Shah had been the Executive Producer but according to Roger Bolton ‘had made virtually no impression on me at all, we rarely if ever had a conversation and his contribution to the editorial content of the programme seemed to me to be minimal. Perhaps I missed something’ .  

The background is that the BBC announced in August 2022 that a new production company and a new presenter were being chosen for Feedback and reported that ‘Listeners have expressed their anger and disappointment’ at the departure’ of a ‘firm favourite’ who was ‘known for being unafraid to firmly hold BBC senior figures to account’.

On his podcast Roger continued; ‘Samir seemed to spend a lot more of his time on his political interests. He is said to be a friend of the  Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, who was said to want him to be Chair of the Victoria and Albert Museum…he is well liked in Government circles’. 

I have no other evidence on whether Dr Shah and Mr Sunak are friends.,

Were ITV’s investigations into Philip Schofield ‘considerable enough’? 

Preparing to be interviewed on ITV News on 7th December 2023 about the publication of a summary of the independent report into ITV’s handing of Philip Schofield’s relationship with a runner on This Morning, I noticed something odd.

It is first worth emphasising that what was published was not the report by Jane Mulcahy KC but her summary of her report. She explained that ‘there are a number of aspects of this Review which are highly personal and private to various individuals’ and therefore the report itself is confidential.

At the end of her summary ITV helpfully published the Terms of Reference which they agreed with the KC at the start of her review. 

The first two points are;

1. To determine and set out the steps taken by ITV in 2019 and 2020 to look into the rumours that Phillip Schofield was in a relationship with a member of the Daytime production team (“Person X”).

2. To consider and set out whether these steps were appropriate and adequate in the circumstances, taking into account applicable/relevant policies and procedures in place at the time and having regard to any legal duty of care owed to Person X by ITV.

I have underlined what seem to me to be crucial parts of the Terms of Reference, especially given the allegations by former This Morning presenter Eamonn Holmes that there were ways in which the ITV management could have established the truth much earlier. In particular he alleged that ITV could have checked their transport records to see whether it was true that the runner was collected from Philip Schofield ’s home on Friday mornings.

I then looked at the summary to find Jane Mulcahy’s conclusions on these points. All I can find is:

ITV’s management made considerable efforts to determine the truth about an alleged relationship between PS and PX following on from the publication of a story in The Sun newspaper in early December 2019. However, in the face of the denials of the individuals involved, ITV was unable to uncover the relevant evidence until PS’s admission in late May 2023.

What does not appear in the summary is any further detail of these ‘considerable efforts’. Given her Terms of Reference to ‘set out’ the steps taken by ITV I would have expected a summary list of these efforts, in particular whether at the time of the original rumours ITV did or didn’t check transport records. I would also have expected her judgement about whether ‘ these steps were appropriate and adequate’. There is no such judgement in the summary other than the words ‘considerable efforts’

My own conclusion is that there is no evidence in the summary to indicate whether the KC carried out her full terms of reference. It is possible that the report itself does have more details of ITV’s ‘considerable efforts’ and the KC’s judgment about them but they have not been included in the summary for some reason. If that was the case it could have been explained in the summary.

Before I appeared on ITV News at 1830 and referred to this issue I asked ITV News to raise it with ITV management but I have not heard any response. 

What is the truth on the Government’s broken ‘pledge’ on the license fee?

The BBC World at One news bulletin report on the higher licence fee (7th December 2023) ended ‘It is an increase of  6.7 % which is lower than Ministers had pledged’. That sounded fighting talk so I checked if it was true the Government had broken a pledge.

I found a letter from the then Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries to the BBC in January 2002

‘From the third year of the settlement period (i.e. from 1 April 2024 and for each subsequent year of the period until 31 March 2028), the Licence Fee will then increase annually in line with CPI inflation’.

That seemed to me to imply but not specifically state that the increase would be in line with the annual rate of inflation rather than choosing a particular month’s increase which is what the Government chose to do. But the Government statement openly admits they have changed the rules of the game.

in recognition of the ongoing cost of living pressures faced by families, the government has today decided to change how the inflation-linked uplifts to the licence fee are calculated for 2024….The previous methodology for calculating inflation was the averaged annualised October to September CPI figure of 9 per cent. The new methodology for 2024 uses the annual rate of CPI in September 2023 of 6.7 per cent, and is the approach used to calculate uplifts to benefits’.