Harding Hard Of Hearing?

 

The BBC’s Director of BBC News and Current Affairs, James Harding, has launched a counter-blast to Conservative complaints of BBC bias. Harding’s response shows how quickly new recruits to the BBC absorb the dominant cultural and political orthodoxy of the organisation and so rapidly adopt the unquestioning obedience to the hand that feeds them.

Rather than admit what was a clear-cut case of bias and intemperate language by a BBC reporter Harding sets out to trivialise and sidestep the seriousness of the complaint.

He makes his case in the Telegraph starting off with this….

 Apparently the “Tories are at war with the BBC”. Rows between the BBC and the Government of the day are nothing new. They go back decades to the very birth of the BBC. And few would argue that a cozy relationship between the BBC and government – or indeed any news organisation – would be a good thing. Scrutiny and accountability can sometimes be a bumpy ride.

 

Immediately you can see he has no intention of genuinely dealing with the complaint instead dismissing it as ‘nothing new’, merely part of an age old game played by politicians….then trying to imply that taking the complaint seriously would be bowing to political pressure compromising BBC independence and integrity.

He goes on to say…

The economy is one of the key issues at the heart of the election. The BBC has played a leading role in covering the financial crisis and the return to economic growth. We have made huge efforts to give balanced coverage and reflect all sides of the argument from the fall in unemployment and the rise in private sector jobs, to the challenges caused by persistently downward pressure on wages and the resulting lower-than-expected tax receipts.

 

 

The economy is indeed one of, if not the most important, issues in the coming election which is why the BBC has a duty to report impartially with all the facts…something it has patently failed to do.

He tells us the BBC has played a leading role in reporting the economy in a balanced manner…is that true? No.

The BBC, as reported so often on this site, pushed Labour’s Plan B relentlessly, it pushed ‘Keynesian’ economics, it pushed the Occupy movement, it recruited Occupy acolytes like Giles Fraser. The BBC consistently reported we had a double dip recession, its journalists still do, despite the fact we had no double dip….the BBC reported with an all too evident eagerness that we were heading for a triple dip recession…the fallacy of that is all too obvious.

 

As for reporting the ‘the challenges caused by the persistent downward pressure on wages’ they certainly did report on that subject…but no-where near the truth….you will be hard pressed now to get a BBC journalist to link immigration to low wages and the subsequent fall in tax revenue and the increase in welfare payments.

The BBC repeatedly told us there was a puzzle as to why employment was increasing when productivity wasn’t increasing…but that fails to understand that wages are a part of productivity…..if wages fall and output stays the same then productivity, per pound not per worker, has gone up.

The BBC never bothered to knock on a factory door and ask why they were employing more people preferring instead to spin a tale of an economic mystery that apparently gave a lie to the face value facts of an improving economy. Let’s face it no employer would employ someone unless they had a reason to…they aren’t charities…and yet the BBC persistently insisted they were doing so, flying in the face of economic wisdom.

 

Harding defends the BBC by saying….

 In fact, it is not the BBC that pointed out that reductions in public spending proposed by the Chancellor on Wednesday amounted to a return to state spending on citizens last seen in the 1930s.

 

Indeed he is right…except the OBR referred to 1938 specifically not the ‘1930’s’ and definitely not the Depression era early 1930’s that the BBC decided to use as its comparison claiming this was the OBR’s reference…a blatant attempt to encourage a view that the Tories were going to lead us into an era where poverty and misery would be ‘stalking the land’, to coin a phrase.

 

He tells us that…

Through the course of the past week, we reported the run up to the Autumn statement as the Government made a series of announcements: a £2bn commitment to the NHS on Sunday, a package of infrastructure investments on Monday, a flood defences plan on Tuesday and the Autumn Statement on Wednesday.

 

Trouble is the plans were pretty much dismissed by the BBC as electioneering hype by the Tories and that once the election was over would be quietly shelved.

 

Here we get to the heart of the matter….

Just after 6am on Thursday morning, Norman Smith, the BBC’s Assistant Political Editor, was pointing out that while many headlines were around the changes to Stamp Duty – the big new news of the Autumn Statement – the issue that would dominate in the months ahead was the OBR’s prediction that Britain could face a return to 1930s public spending per capita. And if some people thought his reference to George Orwell’s Road to Wigan Pier was a tad strong, his editorial judgment was exactly right: spending cuts to reduce the deficit will be a central argument of the election. It’s clear it will be an issue irrespective of whichever party wins.

 

Note Harding makes no mention of Smith’s toxic reference to the economic outlook as ‘utterly terrible’ and dismisses his other comparison of the economy to an era of slump and depression, starvation, joblessness and misery.

He then helpfully and unintentionally spells out why the BBC’s biased reporting should not go unchallenged saying ‘spending cuts to reduce the deficit will be a central argument of the election.’…unwittingly admitting that by reporting in a biased manner Smith is misreporting one of the most important issues of the election.

And yet the BBC’s head of news’ trite, self-serving response to complaints of bias is to say ‘Well, look how clever my journalist is, he’s spotted that the deficit might play an important role in the election. He may well have spun a tale of doom and gloom that favours the Labour narrative but any Tory complaints are just the usual unfair criticisms we expect from politicians.’

This is a typical BBC response to criticism, brush it under the carpet, dismiss it paradoxically as other people’s bias and not the BBC’s, and to proclaim the BBC’s integrity and genius.

One day the Tories will have the guts to disembowel the BBC and bring it to heel. Until they do every election will be a battle not just against other parties’ political machines but also against the BBC’s hugely powerful and influential propaganda machine.

 

 

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9 Responses to Harding Hard Of Hearing?

  1. Guest Who says:

    Going out, and in defence when nailed…

    ‘brush it under the carpet’ – First few CECUTT template exchanges from droid-bots

    ‘dismiss it paradoxically as other people’s bias and not the BBC’s’ – Next salvo from an ECU Director or two, usually with a hefty dose of belief thrown in.

    ‘..and to proclaim the BBC’s integrity and genius’ – should it get as far as ‘The Trust’, with yet more belief that the BBC has got the BBC right again.

    At some stage it will sink in that the BBC singing the BBC’s praises does not carry quite as much independent authority as they appear to imagine it does.

       33 likes

  2. john in cheshire says:

    What is so wrong with reducing government spending?I’ve been waiting for decades to see a reduction in the amount of MY money that is spent by strangers without my permission. Any normal person should be looking forward to the start of the long overdue reduction in goverrnment spending. Concomitant with that, hopefully, will be a reduction in taxation and an increase in interest rates. Add withdrawal from the EU and we could, at last, be on the path back to having our country back and the end of this socialist insanity.

       48 likes

    • Cockney says:

      Which country would be we be having back under that prescription? Britain in the 1930s? Oh, hang on…

         2 likes

    • Glen says:

      You could start with taking down every public servant who steals a wage that is in excess of that of the Prime Minister?? There are thousands who, apparently, believe running their little empire is actually more important and tougher than running the country!!

      I don’t see too many of these ‘socialists’ giving up their wage and embracing the ‘all in it together’ sentiment. I’ve seen public spending waste first hand while working on contracts in their buildings, it’s unbelievable how easily they piss our money up the wall.

         8 likes

  3. Jeff Waters says:

    So has Alan Yentob – http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/tv-radio/yentob-leads-the-bbc-fightback-were-being-smeared-for-exposing-fake-sheikh-9913371.html

    Apparently the fact that Jeremy Clarkson and a handful of other presenters and senior staff are right wingers shows that the corporation doesn’t have a left-wing bias…

       21 likes

  4. JimS says:

    Jeremy Vine discovers that government spending has been going up, [1:44] “So why do..why does the government , why is it allowed to say it is doing austerity when it’s splurging?”

    Simon Jenkins: “Because the BBC and others keep saying so..”

       31 likes

  5. #88 says:

    ‘…We have made huge efforts to give balanced coverage and reflect all sides of the argument from the fall in unemployment and the rise in private sector jobs, to the challenges caused by persistently downward pressure on wages and the resulting lower-than-expected tax receipts.’

    No they haven’t. Smith wasn’t reporting…he was making a judgement, giving his opinion. He is not qualified to do so, it is not appropriate that he does so. And let’s not forget that ‘some people say’ that Smith has got previous; not least his now notorious argument on the steps of Number Ten as he claimed that Cameron was becoming ‘enmeshed’ in phone hacking. To say nothing of his continually less than balanced reporting of the weekly PMQ’s encounters. And where did Smith’s bias lead him? An admonishment? No – he got promoted.

    This is not a case of the Tories shooting the messenger. Smith and the BBC are not messengers they are activists, using the resources of the BBC to disseminate their own view of the world.

    It has to stop,

       36 likes

  6. dave s says:

    What a waste of time it all is. The BBC is stuffed full of liberal left. It has been like this for years. Like recruits like. Can you honestly imagine an interview board composed of liberal left seriously considering employing a right winger however good .?
    It would never happen.
    The main problem is that so used has the liberal left been to dominating public discourse that the liberals all believe that their way is normality and that to be opposed is to be somehow deviant or even bad.
    Hence the continual barrage of abuse heaped on UKIP and before that on the EDL. . Hence the pathetic comedy shows that are nothing other than left wing so called joke shows.
    Give it a rest BBC apologists. This is a culture war for the future of our country and the West. The lot of you are on the other side and the time for arguments over this is past.

       36 likes

  7. Glen says:

    There was another piece this week on 5 barely alive supporting the licence fee, they rolled out a few bbc ‘expert’ employees who told the listeners how important the beeb is and how the world would be a poorer place without it. They are worried.

    The statement on how the bbc has aided the financial recovery, even though liebour deny it?, was breathtaking. The 1930s comparison was a disgrace and I didn’t hear one argument against the accusation…lying liberal scum.

    You can see the strategy for the GE in May, the beeb will saturate every media outlet with a negative Tory/UKIP story on a weekly basis with their usual inane slogans…1930s..poverty…food banks…fag packet politics..blah,blah,blah.

    It’s similar to subliminal advertising, short sharp shocks that the people who vote will remember in an attempt to sway them.

       4 likes