Two top leaders at the BBC resigned on Sunday amid an escalating scandal over impartiality and bias that plunged Britain’s public broadcaster into one of its biggest crises in recent years.
The BBC’s most senior executive, director general Tim Davie, and the chief executive of the news division, Deborah Turness, both quit after the leak of a deeply critical memo that, among other things, revealed that the BBC had misleadingly edited a speech by Donald Trump to make it appear that he had directly called for violence on January 6.



It shunted together two paragraphs in Trump’s speech that were 50 minutes apart to make it sound like he explicitly told people to attack congress. There’s no editorial justification for that.
Well, except for the fact that he did tell people to do that.
They should have used that clip instead.
But he did say ‘we fight like hell’. The bad edit just made it seem clearer than Trump’s speeches ever are. If there had been an edit flash (where the screen briefly goes grey between clips) and ideally a couple of snatches of speech from in between, there would have been no credible complaint. This seems more like wanting history to be neater than it usually is, not an attempt to change Trump’s fundamental message, no matter how much he’s backpedalled it since.
The BBC board did this to lick Trump’s ass, as can be seen by Trump’s gloating after the “resignations.”
Appeasers of fascists shouldn’t hold public office.