BBC impartiality has always been a myth, as is the nostalgia for a time when the BBC had no political positions, either imposed from within top down, or imposed from without by a controlling government, or bubbling up from its creative, disproportionately southern, middle class, university educated workforce.
in 2000 Gregg Dyke took over from John Birt as director general of the BBC. He was appointed despite Conservative protests that he had donated £50,000 to the Labour Party and was a 'crony'. And In January 2001 Gavyn Davies was appointed vice-chairman of the BBC Board of Governors. He was promoted to chairman just 10 months later for a five-year term after being recommended by Tessa Jowell. Davies had in the past donated a portion of his considerable wealth to the Labour Party, of which he had been a long-term supporter. His appointment as BBC chairman sparked allegations yet again of cronyism from opposition political parties – Davies' wife Sue Nye was a private secretary to Gordon Brown and the pair were known to be good friends. Upon becoming chairman, Davies resigned his membership of the Labour Party.
These two met their demise over the "dodgy dossier" and the hangman on that occasion was Alistair Campbell, the same Alistair Campbell who is playing the "look over there! Look over there!" Game over Gibb and Prescott. Even for Alistair Campbell this is top shelf hypocrisy.
So the idea that it's only the right that engages in political interference at the BBC is clearly a nonsense, as is the idea that the BBC's present difficulty is a direct result of it. The right are responsible for exposing this shit show and the right are making hay with it, but they are not the cause of it.
This present scandal might have a lot of moving parts and a large cast of characters but essentially it's not difficult to understand, it's being made to look opaque by those with a dog in the race.
Over thirty years ago I spent a rather delightful day at the BBC studios where their Arabic output is produced, I worked in the Middle East at the time, I equipped hospitals, and I was accompanied by a very wealthy Lebanese business man who was my representative out there, I'd arranged the visit as he was a big fan of the BBC's Arabic output. Anyways as you can imagine the department was entirely run not just by Arabic speakers but by Arabs and they pumped out news in the pre-internet era that was gratefully received, particularly in places like Saudi and Syria, where their local broadcasters would decline to tell you whether the sun was shining unless sanctioned to do so by the State.
The BBC was then and still is a huge organisation, with lots of moving parts and its Arabic set up was just one small bit of it, but I got the distinct impression it ran its own little show, part of but distinct from Mr Blobby and Panorama. They decided their own editorial policy and unless they dropped a complete bollock no one noticed, in fact back then I suspect they dropped a bollock quite a bit but no one gave a shit, even then their output was quite distinct from the stuff that got pumped out to Tunbridge Wells.
Fast forward to the present and the world is a nastier and more fragmented place and I try to imagine what it must be like for the guys in the Arabic department today, in what was a dusty little corner of the BBC now thrust into the limelight. The only thing I do know is that there is no way folk in the Arab world would tune into the BBC's Arabic service if the BBC, under the imperative, straitjacket, whatever you want to call it, of impartiality, was compelled to pump out the same stuff it broadcasts to the folk back home. This problem is a consequence of the BBC's global footprint in an increasingly polarised world and the febrile nature of our political and broadcast environment and I have some sympathy for the BBC on this one.
But not too much.
We all laugh at Fox and GB News, the Telegraph and the Mail for their obvious political bias, their opinions dressed up as news or their infamous "alternative facts". But the BBC has opinions as well, it has a political stance, it just won't fess up to them, and given its size and global reach their opinions and politics are not consistent across the piste. What pisses me off about the BBC is that under the guise of impartiality, under the conceit of occupying a central role in our national life, their opinions, their politics, are proselytised courtesy of the licence fee, rammed home as de facto the "correct" politics, they have set themselves up as the moral arbiter of what is true, objective and impartial, when of course they are nothing of the sort, not now, not never.
The BBC must be saved, but it must be saved because it's worth saving and not just because the alternatives are much worse. And that's going to require a serious reality check and root and branch change, if not it has no long term future.