BBC Chair Sends Personal Apology After ‘Panorama’ Edit Creates False Impression of Incitement to Violence
London: The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has issued an apology to U.S. President Donald Trump after a 2024 episode of its investigative program, Panorama, was found to have misleadingly edited a clip of his January 6, 2021, speech. The edit created the false impression that President Trump directly incited violence at the U.S. Capitol.
The fallout from the scandal has been immediate and severe, leading to the resignations of two of the broadcaster’s most senior figures: BBC Director General Tim Davie and Head of News Deborah Turness.
In a correction statement, the BBC admitted that the edit made President Trump’s remarks appear as a continuous call to action. BBC Chair Samir Shah subsequently sent a personal apology to the White House, accepting the edit was an “error of judgment” that gave the impression “of a direct call for violent action.”
However, the corporation has refused to pay compensation, despite President Trump’s legal team threatening to sue for one billion dollars. The BBC maintains that there is no basis for a defamation claim against the broadcaster. The program, Trump: A Second Chance?, has since been pulled and the BBC has stated it will not be rebroadcast.
The apology comes amid intense scrutiny over the BBC’s editorial standards. The controversy deepened when a second, similar misleading edit from a 2022 Newsnight broadcast surfaced hours before the official apology.
President Trump’s lawyers are demanding a full retraction and compensation, alleging a wider pattern of defamation. Concerns about systemic bias within the BBC have also intensified following the publication of a leaked memo in The Telegraph, which criticized the broadcaster’s reporting on both trans issues and its BBC Arabic coverage of the Israel-Gaza conflict.




