Reform leader Mr Farage claimed the Beeb has been ‘institutionally biased for decades’
THE BBC licence fee must be scrapped in its current form, top politicians demanded tonight.
Nigel Farage led the charge, saying the telly tax âcannot surviveâ and is âwholly unsustainableâ.
The Beebâs chair, Samir Shah, and other top brass rejected claims of systemic bias in its news reporting.
But, in Westminster, Reform leader Mr Farage claimed the Beeb has been âinstitutionally biased for decadesâ.
He argued the corporation should be âslimmed downâ to focus on news, and that in sport and entertainment it should âcompeteâ via subscriptions.
Mr Farage said: âWhen it comes to entertainment, when it comes to sport and mayn (should read as âmanyâ?) other areas like that â well, they should compete against everyone else for a subscription model.
âThat is the modern world that we live in.â He added: âSo the licence fee as it currently is cannot survive, it is wholly unsustainable.â The Reform chief insisted that unless the Beeb sticks to âstraight newsâ then it âhas no future at allâ.
The current BBC TV Licence costs £174.50 a year.
Annual reports show 23.8 million licences were in force this year, down around 300,000 on 2023-24.
That plunge has cost the embattled corporation an estimated ÂŁ50million in revenue.
Downing Street refused to say whether the licence fee is up for discussion in the charter review.
A spokesperson for Sir Keir Starmer said: âWeâre preparing for the upcoming charter review, which we expect to launch in due course, and it will consider a range of issues including how the BBC can continue to prosper supported by a sustainable funding model.â
âSAVE BBC FROM ITSELFâ
Tory Leader Kemi Badenoch warned that âif it wants to justify the licence fee, the BBC needs to reflect a broad spectrum of views in Britainâ.
She said: âThose of us who actually believe in the institution are trying to save the BBC from itself.â
Ex-Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries blasted the fee as a âa regressive tax which criminalises people who donât pay it for not for watching a television is so far outdatedâ.
She told Times Radio: âIt defies explanation.
âThe BBC licence fee, that was my issue.
âI do not believe that I should be paying for a licence fee to watch my television.â
TIPS FOR THE TOP JOB
ALEX Mahon, ex-Channel 4 CEO, now CEO at Superstruct Entertainment:Â Seen as fierce but fair with a good business head but her Channel 4 pedigree counts her out.
Charlotte Moore, ex-BBC chief content officer, now CEO of Left Bank Pictures and Sony Pictures TV:Â Well-respected and is said to have actively thrown her hat into the ring.
Jane Turton, former chief creative officer at Channel 4, now CEO of All3Media: Insiders say she has long been viewed as a potential DG with a wealth of experience. Last at the Beeb as BBC One controller in 2010.
Jay Hunt, Appleâs creative director of worldwide video, ex-BBC1 controller: Proven track record for commissioning hit shows including Luther.
Kate Phillips, BBCâs chief content officer:Â More than 12 years at the Beeb. Has been Director of Unscripted and commissioned The Traitors.
Sir Trevor Phillips, writer, broadcaster and former chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission:Â Tipped by The Spectator to save the BBC with reform, Phillips has a experience across broadcasting and politics.
James Purnell, ex-BBC strategy director and MP, CEO of advisory Flint: The bookiesâ favourite to take on the role in 2020, before Davie was hired.
Carolyn McCall, chief exec of ITV: A wildcard, but may be leaving the broadcaster if there is a takeover by Sky.







