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    1. Saintsman83 on

      Isn’t the saying that if the left think you’re too far right leaning, and the right thing you’re too far left leaning you’ve got it spot on? My personal view is that Farage and Reform get too much air time in comparison to Lib dems and the greens so overall I don’t think there’s too much of an issue

    2. Express-Doughnut-562 on

      >Some 31 per cent said the BBC was [biased in favour of Left-wing views](https://archive.is/o/Fh5qA/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/11/10/apologise-white-middle-class-life-inside-bbc/), while 19 per cent believed the corporation to be biased in favour of Right-wing views.

      >Only 19 per cent said the BBC was not politically biased at all, while 31 per cent of respondents said they did not know.

      Given how much the right wing hammer home the lefty bias BBC narrative I would suggest that means they’re nailing it.

    3. Agreeable_Falcon1044 on

      Best move davie and gibb did, produce one of the most right leaning biased coverage with stacked panels, selected audiences and one sided interviews…whilst claiming they need to be more right leaning due to a left bias!

    4. strongfavourite on

      Corbyn, Farage, Lineker, Israel.. Keunssberg, Raffi Berg, Tim Davie and on and on and on

      >public believes

      the evidence proves otherwise

    5. Pheasant_Plucker84 on

      Just because the BBC air some programmes that have black people or show gay people kissing, people accuse them of being “left wing” or Woke. Politically they are right wing or at the very least capitalist. The BBC do their best to slander any left wing politician whilst giving more time than they should to right wing politicians.

    6. RaymondBumcheese on

      I know/knew people who worked in BBC News and one of the metrics they used to assess bias is the amount of complaints they received accusing them of being left/right. It traditionally broke even which they took as proof that they were doing impartiality right.

      Their big problem now, really, is that people now lie with absolutely impunity so to be ‚impartial‘ in a topic is to often present absolute bullshit as an opposing view. Treating ‚both sides‘ seriously inherently gives validation to absolutely absurd positions.

      ‚Here is Oxford university professor of astronomy saying the sun comes up in the morning and here is some right wing crank from the daily mail who is saying its a spotlight put up there by lizard people‘

    7. So two thirds think they aren’t?

      But seriously, this is a „snap poll“ right after a major news story. It’s an obvious attempt by the Telegraph to continue to try to damage the BBC.

    8. Accomplished-Ad-6639 on

      31% say biased left, 
      19% say biased right,
      19% say no bias, 
      31% don’t know.

      Those seem like poll numbers you’d expect for a network that was unbiased?

    9. OkAsparagus839 on

      Having consumed the BBC for decades I’d say the issue is less left-right and more a lack of detail.

      The BBC is too focused on representing every view with balance that it doesn’t interrogate what is being said and drop that representation when what is said can be demonstrated to be false.

      Not doing so produces a low quality tit for tat approach where lies and uncritically amplified. Those who know how to game this system get over-represented which then magnifies the issue over time.

    10. impioussaint on

      a third thinks it is right wing bias and a third don’t care, the other 1% doesn’t care. What is fascinating about this is if this was any other news channel editing footage to fit a political bias that would be business as normal when BBC does it theres a meltdown.

    11. Howcanitbesosimple on

      That’s actually pretty good tbh, 1/3rd of the population is right of centre.

    12. Ill-Coconut8237 on

      I’m coming from this from a left wing perspective but personally, I don’t think the BBC has ignored right wing views especially when it comes to politics. The beeb has a Reform MP on TV every week while the Liberal Democrats in comparison are never on even though they have more MP’s. Nigel Farage has also practically been platformed by the BBC due to his constant appearances on QT over the years.

      The only show that I can honestly remember from recent memory batting me over the head with what you would call „wokeness“ is Doctor Who but I think that’s more of an issue with the show having shit writing.

      The only way I could view the BBC as having a right wing bias as if I look at it through the lens of a reform voter who a) doesn’t like being challenged on anything and b) finds it uncomfortable seeing someone who doesn’t look like them on TV. To that point, I think some people just need to understand that not all Television reflects them, grow up and maybe watch something else.

    13. The thing that REALLY winds me up with things like this is the amount of pure morons that simply *do not have their own opinion* and just recycle the absolute rubbish they’ve heard on social media, which unfortunately seems to go pretty viral… And they tend to be right wing

      Edit: corrected a typo (thing – > things)

    14. According_Parfait680 on

      What an absolutely farcical headline. So the minority that want all their media to have a right wing bias?? Is the Telegraph claiming that as some kind of victory?? What a joke of a publication that rag has become.

    15. nextquestioncya on

      the senior appointments had such close links with the conservative party and there is such well documented bias against left wing politics during the corbyn years particularly. That’s before we get to the over reliance on Farage and his parties for so-called balance when they weren’t polling significantly with the general public. This is all a Trump-manufactured lie.

    16. evolveandprosper on

      Left-wing bias? That must be why they keep putting Nigel Farage on Question Time…Oh!…Hang on a minute…

    17. andymaclean19 on

      I’m fairly sure a third of the public also believes Nigel Farrage could do the job of PM.

    18. Particular_Tough4860 on

      **Survey results on perceived BBC political bias**

      |Response option|Percentage|
      |:-|:-|
      |BBC biased (total)|50%|
      |- Biased to the Left|31%|
      |- Biased to the Right|19%|
      |BBC not politically biased|19%|
      |Don’t know|31%|

      Source: According to this Telegraph article, which quotes a YouGov poll of 4921 people.

    19. Militant_Worm on

      31% said left wing bias 

      19% said right wing bias

      19% said no bias 

      31% selected „I don’t know“

    20. Not reading the article but I assume this is from yesterday’s YouGov poll. It’s close but 31% is not a third. 19% said it had a right wing bias, 19% said the BBC had no bias and 31% don’t know. Put simply 69% don’t think it has a left wing bias.

    21. This means that two thirds of the public do not have this beliefs/ opinion .
      Do the one third of the population then consider REFORM to be LEFT OR RIGHT biased ?

    22. Additional_Hippo_878 on

      If ONLY it actually was, and wasn’t just another right-wing mouthpiece. The British Bullshitting Corporation. 🤮

    23. a3minutehero on

      Man, the Telegraph is really stroking that hate boner for the BBC at the moment aren’t they.

    24. CaptMelonfish on

      very marginally left of centre
      [https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/bbc/](https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/bbc/)

      However, if you look into the report this is due to a right lean on business, immigration, politics, and religion. elsewhere they’re more left leaning.
      So if you’re right aligned, you likely see the bbc as left leaning. and if you’re left aligned you probably see it as a bit more right leaning.

      which if i’m being honest is completely fine. the credibility is the really important bit, and the bbc has it in buckets. Though it would be really bloody weird to have a station that’s dedicated to a particular viewpoint (I’m looking at you gbeebies).

    25. ash_ninetyone on

      I’d also bet money on there being a third of the public that also believed the Beeb has a Right-wing bias and has been giving Reform an easy pass.

    26. Right-Ad-3834 on

      Not just BBC, the society itself and the democracies seem to be leaning towards the left.

    27. Illustrious-Lab-9683 on

      I think the easiest way to find out if someone has a left or right bias. Ask them if they think the bbc is left or right. What ever they choose they believe in the opposite

    28. Acrobatic_Yogurt_327 on

      They have been caught red handed editing clips, repeatedly hiring “journalists” who praise Hitler to report on Israel and to not publish stories that were negative about Hamas on BBC Arabic.

      The facts kind of speak for themselves

    29. NotSoEnlightenedOne on

      Super Hans: „People like Coldplay and voted for the Nazis, you can’t trust people“

    30. Impression I get is that people in general think the BBC is biased against their own political perspective.

    31. I personally don’t think the BBC is biased either way, but I do think it struggles with maintaining impartiality for individual segments or programmes. Question Time is a good example, there’s the obvious point of Nigel Farage amassing 38 appearances on the show compared to Jeremy Corbyn’s 3, but it’s worth looking at the non-politician panelists as well.

      Between 2014 and 2023 both Isabel Oakeshott (Spectator, Daily Mail, GB News, Talk V) and Julia Hartley-Brewer (Spectator, Telegraph, Talk Radio/TV) have appeared on QT thirteen times. Kate Andrews (IEA/Spectator) and Tim Stanley (Telegraph/Spectator) have both appeared twelve times, and Camilla Tominey (Express/Telegraph/Spectator) has appeared ten times. That means for at least 60 episodes The Spectator has received representation on Question Time.

      Cardiff University’s research found that in that nine year period, the most frequent non-political guests were nearly all affiliated with right wing news outlets and none wrote for left wing outlets. After Tominey, Anne McElvoy (Economist/Politico) and Theo Paphitis appeared eight times. Fraser Nelson (Spectator/Telegraph) Melanie Phillips (The Times), Merryn Somerset Webb (Money Week), Peter Hitchens (Mail on Sunday/Spectator), Piers Morgan (ITV, Talk TV, Daily Mail) all appeared seven times.

      There is simply no comparable representation from the left. The most frequently featured writers from the left were Novara’s Ash Sarkar who appeared six times, and former Guardian columnist Giles Fraser who appeared five times.

      In terms of political appearances, there is more balance but there still appears to be a bias towards the political right. The QT audience is bound by strict impartiality rules and I believe the show does a good job at selecting an audience that is representative of the UK, but the same cannot be said for the panelists. I think a recent example of this stark disconnect was the episode aired on the 9th October in Shrewsbury.

    32. Maleficent_Crazy5330 on

      This is hilarious I love how they have separated us that much when the BBC has been caught lying in front of everyone the left still make it about reform 🫡

    33. A lot of ppl now think left wing means being ok with women presenting Match of the day.

    34. But they shuttered a bunch of left leaning shows after Boris installed that director general.

      And since then right wing focussed political parties have had far more screentime than they did previously.

      It’s not left leaning at all. Mostly facts, and if facts are left leaning and you don’t like that, maybe take a look at yourself.

    35. The country is left leaning compared to the US particularly now the US has gone full Nazi. Let’s not change the standard line like they have over there. BBC is pretty middle of the road tbh. I’d say slightly right leaning.

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