Gary Lineker criticised over Rwanda comments in impartiality row

11 months ago 27
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Gary LinekerImage source, Ian Walton

Image caption,

New questions are being asked of new BBC impartiality rules

By Guy Lambert

Culture reporter

Gary Lineker has faced fresh criticism after backing a campaign calling for the scrapping of the government's plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda.

He and other celebrities signed an open letter calling for politicians to come up with a "fair new plan for refugees".

Defence Secretary Grant Shapps questioned whether the Match of the Day host should express political views.

The BBC clarified its guidelines on impartiality earlier this year and Lineker said he had not broken them.

The corporation said Lineker was free to make comments publicly "as long as these do not conflict with his BBC commitments; do not breach guidelines on conflicts of interest; nor bring the BBC into disrepute". It also noted that Lineker's latest action was not made on social media.

The letter has been published on the website of campaign coalition Together With Refugees in the week MPs will vote on the Safety of Rwanda Bill, a new attempt by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to get the scheme up and running after it was rejected by the Supreme Court last month.

Some of those MPs have accused Lineker, the highest of the BBC's publicly declared earners, of breaching BBC guidelines which limit him from intervening in party politics.

Mr Shapps said: "I think he should stop meddling in these other areas," he said. "It's all very well signing letters... but I would suggest just focusing on football would be a better solution for him."

After the letter was released, Conservative MP Jonathan Gullis said it was "yet another breach of the BBC's impartiality rules by Gary Lineker".

However, Lineker then responded: "Jonathan hasn't read the new guidelines…. or, should I say, had someone read them to him?"

The open letter, co-ordinated by Together With Refugees, says "a new system that reflects the will of the British people" is needed.

It states: "Our government is still trying to banish people fleeing persecution to Rwanda despite the highest court in the land ruling the scheme unlawful."

The letter goes on to brand the UK's refugee system "ever-more uncaring, chaotic and costly".

Image source, Hannah McKay

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Defence Secretary Grant Shapps fundamentally disagrees with Lineker

Other signatories include actors Brian Cox and David Morrissey, comedian Suzi Ruffell, TV chef Big Zuu and women's rights campaigner Helen Pankhurst.

Lineker was among a handful of the signatories who supplied separate quotes for the organisation's press release in which he stated: "We need a new system that reflects the will of the British people who have opened their homes, donated and volunteered in their local communities.

"That's why I'm backing this new campaign - because fair really can begin here."

The Conservatives' deputy chairman Lee Anderson told the Daily Mail: "For once in his life, Gary's absolutely right - we do need a system that reflects the will of the British people. What the people want is to stop the boats and to tell overpaid crisp salesmen to put a sock in it."

Previously, the BBC had stated that Lineker's high profile came with "additional responsibility".

The BBC had social media guidelines for staff working in news and current affairs, to protect its mission for impartiality, and earlier this year this year revised how those regulations should apply to other staff and freelancers.

It came after a backlash over comments Lineker made about Suella Braverman, then home secretary, in March - which was followed by several high-profile BBC Sport presenters, commentators and pundits withdrawing their services in support of Lineker's position that the staff guidelines did not apply to him.

After a review, the BBC named a list of people, including Lineker, that it was defining as "flagship presenters".

They are presenters of flagship programmes outside news and current affairs, who have "a particular responsibility to respect the BBC's impartiality, because of their profile on the BBC".

Image source, Nick Potts

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Lineker supported the new BBC social media guidelines

Now, as a flagship presenter, the rules state Lineker has more freedom to "express opinions about the issues that matter to [him]" as long as he stops short of what the BBC perceives as political campaigning.

The new guidance also recognises the importance of freedom of expression, but says that while a programme is on air, and for a two-week window before and after the series, presenters on flagship shows must not endorse or attack a political party.

They must also not criticise the character of individual politicians in the UK, or comment on any issue of political debate during an election period (which the UK is not currently in), or take up an official role for a campaigning group.

Following the publication of the new guidance, Lineker responded on X by saying the new rules were "all very sensible".

A spokesperson for the BBC said: "Like all freelance presenters, Gary is free to contribute to projects for third parties, as long as these do not conflict with his BBC commitments; do not breach guidelines on conflicts of interest; nor bring the BBC into disrepute, and he does so regularly."

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