BBC ‘determined to fight’ Trump lawsuit over Panorama documentary

BBC ‘determined to fight’ Trump lawsuit over Panorama documentary

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The BBC has announced it will mount a defence against a defamation lawsuit threatened by United States President Donald Trump, expected to be filed this week.

On Monday, Samir Shah, the chair of the BBC’s board, said the British broadcaster is prepared to fight any complaint the president files.

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“I want to be very clear with you — our position has not changed. There is no basis for a defamation case, and we are determined to fight this,” Shah wrote in a letter to BBC staff.

The letter follows an announcement on Friday from President Trump, saying that he planned to proceed with a lawsuit in the coming days.

“We’ll sue them for anywhere between a billion and $5bn, probably some time next week,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One. “I think I have to do it.”

The controversy stems from the editing of a documentary for the investigative television series Panorama, titled Trump: A Second Chance?

The documentary aired in October 2024, days before Trump won his second term as president that November.

Trump and his allies have alleged that the Panorama documentary sought to misrepresent his statements on January 6, 2021, when a group of his supporters violently stormed the US Capitol in an attempt to disrupt the certification of the 2020 election.

The Republican leader had lost that election to his Democratic rival Joe Biden. But he has falsely maintained that his defeat was due to widespread voter fraud.

The Panorama documentary edited together two separate quotes from Trump’s speech on the day of the riot that were delivered nearly an hour apart.

Together, they appeared to show Trump encouraging his supporters to “fight like hell” after walking down to the Capitol.

Trump and his supporters say that the edit was misleading and that it leaves out critical context. At one point in the speech, for example, Trump told his supporters “to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard”.

Trump also followed his appeal to walk down to the Capitol by calling on his supporters to “cheer on our brave senators and Congressmen and women”.

Tumult at the BBC

The controversy over the documentary has roiled the BBC at a time when the broadcaster faces allegations of internal bias, leaked to the media.

Earlier this month, The Daily Telegraph published an internal BBC memo in which a former adviser, Michael Prescott, expressed concern about “systemic problems” in the broadcaster’s coverage of hot-button topics, including transgender rights and Israel’s war on Gaza, which experts have identified as a genocide.

The BBC has repeatedly denied institutional bias, and its leadership has stood by the quality of its report

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