Head of Commons media committee denies writing article accusing BBC of bias
It was a crisis that toppled a BBC director general and his head of news. After contentious accusations of bias by a former external adviser
It was a crisis that toppled a BBC director general and his head of news. After contentious accusations of bias by a former external adviser, Michael Prescott, both Tim Davie and Deborah Turness quit the corporation. At the height of the media storm that ensued last November, the corporation was struck by another blow. A key figure in scrutinising the BBC â the chair of the Commons culture, media and sport committee â delivered an equally damning verdict. In an article for the ConservativeHome website, Conservative MP Caroline Dinenage said Prescottâs claims âmade plain what many viewers have sensed for some time: a pattern of institutional bias within BBC News and current affairsâ. She also accused it of âdeep anti-Israel biasâ. The issue, she wrote, âruns into the very culture, editorial mindset and assumptions that have shaped the BBC for yearsâ.
It was a strong take for a figure who would no doubt be involved in examining the claims Prescott had made. A problem has emerged with the excoriating article, however â Dinenage now says she did not write it. Dinenage was quizzed about the article by the BeebWatch podcast, fronted by former BBC Radio 4 presenter Roger Bolton. However, before the episode was released, the podcast was contacted by Dinenageâs office to say that neither she â nor her team â had written the article, which did not accurately reflect her views â[The article] was strong stuff coming from the supposedly independent chair of a committee helping to decide on the BBCâs future, so naturally I raised these statements with Ms Dinenage in our interview,â Bolton said. âWe had a vigorous discussion in which she did not question the articleâs authenticity, and I challenged her suggestion of institutional bias in particular.
âHowever, shortly after we had recorded the interview, her office contacted us to say that Caroline Dinenage had not written the article, nor had anyone in her office, and that she did not hold some of the beliefs attributed to her.â The section in question was cut from the podcast. Meanwhile, ConservativeHome said it could not find the exact details of how the article reached its team, but stood by its publication. âConservativeHome cannot now find a record of exactly who sent them an article by Caroline Dinenage in November 2025,â it said in a statement. âHowever, it was received in the usual manner, subject to our usual processes, and we believe the article to be genuine, sent in good faith, and remains on our website as a record of that day.â The bizarre disagreement shines a light on the process of drafting opinion pieces that appear under the name of a prominent politician.
