SCOTLAND’S Culture Secretary has condemned the Tory government’s “ideologically-driven” attack on the BBC.
Nadine Dorries said on Sunday that the announcement of the freezing of the licence fee at £159 for two years “would be the last” – indicating there could be a different funding model put in place for the corporation after that.
The UK Culture Secretary’s remarks drew the ire of opposition politicians and staff at the BBC, with Labour’s shadow culture secretary Lucy Powell describing it as “cultural vandalism” and presenters Richard Bacon and Dan Walker criticising the comments.
Scottish Government minister Angus Robertson has now also taken aim at Dorries, calling on Holyrood’s Constitution, Europe, External Affairs and Culture Committee to lobby the UK Government over the issue.
Robertson also raised fears over the future of Channel 4 after reports emerged last year that the UK Government would privatise the station.
“We need to be concerned about threats to the BBC and Channel 4 at the present time,” he told the committee on Thursday.
“The UK Culture Secretary – my opposite number if you want to call her that – Nadine Dorries announce this week, gleefully, the freezing of the BBC licence fee with an implicit threat that it may be cut entirely.
READ MORE: Nadine Dorries is in a dizzying spin cycle over BBC licence fee freeze
“Regardless of the criticism that I, you or anybody else may have about aspects of the BBC – and I do – they are a very important part of the commissioning ecosystem for film and TV and I wouldn’t wish to see that diminished, and the same goes for Channel 4.
“There’s a potential for regressive steps if the UK Government’s ideologically-driven attacks on the BBC and Channel 4 continue.
“Any influence that you can bring to bear as a cross-party committee to try and protect public service broadcasters and the commissioning of independents, especially through Channel 4, is something that we should all be working together and across parties to make sure we’re protecting as well as we can.”
Robertson’s comments came as the Scottish LibDems filed a motion in Holyrood in support of the corporation.
Leader Alex Cole-Hamilton described scrapping the licence fee as a “cynical and desperate tactic” that would send the BBC into “a managed decline”.
He added: “The BBC plays an important role as an educator as well as producing enlightening and challenging drama.
“It is now, and has been for the best part of a century, renowned the world over both for the scope and quality of its journalism.
“Undermining the BBC now, at a time when fact-based journalism is increasingly under threat, would be beyond foolish. We must not allow it to happen.”
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