Another weekend, another edition of The Andy Marr Show (tm), and, to the consternation of all those who
generally support the Beeb in the face of the continued assault from the
right-leaning part of the Fourth Estate, another less than totally critical
interview given to Nigel “Thirsty”
Farage, where he has been able to effectively give a party political puff for
UKIP.
Squeaky broadcast representation finger up the bum time
The facts make less than convincing reading when it comes to accusations that the Corporation gives the chief Kipper too much airtime: Farage has appeared, for instance, on flagship debate show Question Time 16 times since 2009. As the deeply subversive Guardian has pointed out, this is more than all appearances by those representing the Green Party, which has managed just 11 all told.
Moreover, other UKIP stalwarts, such as Paul Nuttall, Diane
James (the party’s candidate in the Eastleigh by-election, and now an MEP) and
Patrick “Lunchtime” O’Flynn (formerly
pundit for the Daily Express, aka Daily UKIP, and also now an MEP), have
appeared on the programme. Farage was on the Marr Show during the election
campaign, too.
And the show on which Mr Thirsty appeared also featured Mil
The Younger, who gave as good as he got in the final few minutes. The
difference today was that UKIP got a prime interview slot, and Labour got
nothing. Think about that: Her Majesty’s Opposition not featuring on the Marr Show,
but
Farage getting another chance to tell that his party would reduce everyone’s
taxes.
But then, he also agreed that UKIP would have “a grammar school in every town” and
bring back the kind of selective education that consigned most pupils to being
labelled academic failures at the ripe old age of eleven. The problem was that
Marr did not press him on this, and allowed Farage to turn on the smiling,
jocular man-of-the-people persona, thereby laughing off any criticism.
And this matters: the Beeb’s coverage of UKIP generated well
over a thousand complaints of bias in favour of the party. But the Corporation
received not a single complaint of bias in favour of Labour, nor of bias in
favour of the Coalition. The point was well made by Samira Ahmed in the BBC’s
own Newswatch, where she interviewed
Political Editor Nick Robinson (transcript HERE).
Robinson explained his modus operandi well, and defended his
approach soundly. But Farage getting yet another more or less unchallenged gig
on the Marr Show does not look good when put alongside accusations that too
much attention is being given to Farage – and not enough to the constant stream
of fruitcakes that are being unearthed, including
UKIP’s own candidates and councillors.
UKIP is proving a problem for the BBC. For how long? That’s up to the BBC, too.
2 comments:
There was never a Grammar school in every town even in the good/bad old days. How will all this be paid for? It's plucking policy out of his backside and shame on Andrew Marr for letting him get away with it.
At least he pressed him hard on Mrs Farage's view that he smokes and drinks too much and sleeps too little. As they used to say on Tiswas....This is what the people want!
There was a grammar school in Crewe.
I went to it.
It was crap! No-one, espcially the "careers master", had a clue what the employers of the day needed.
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