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Corporate

BBC plans 2,000 job cuts as cost reduction drive

The BBC is preparing to cut up to 2,000 jobs as part of a wide-ranging plan to bring down costs and steady its finances over the next two years. The reduction will impact a significant portion of its workforce and is expected to be one of the broadcaster’s biggest restructurings in years.

The decision comes as the organisation faces growing financial strain from several directions at once. Inflation has pushed up operating costs, while income from the TV licence fee has been under pressure. At the same time, commercial revenues have not grown enough to offset the gap, especially as more audiences move away from traditional broadcasting.

BBC management has set a target of cutting around 10% from its overall budget, which translates into savings of roughly £500 million. Leaders say the changes are necessary because spending has been rising faster than income, creating an unsustainable imbalance.

Interim Director-General Rhodri Talfan Davies told staff the decision was difficult but unavoidable. He said the organisation needed to act now to protect its long-term future and ensure it can continue delivering public service content across TV, radio, and digital platforms.

The job cuts are expected to be rolled out over the next two years, with departments likely to be reorganised as part of the process. While the BBC has not detailed exactly which areas will be most affected, internal discussions suggest a broad restructuring rather than isolated reductions.

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Categories
Leaders

BBC Chiefs quit over Trump speech edit

The BBC is in turmoil after its top executives resigned over a controversial edit of a Donald Trump speech.

Director-General Tim Davie and News CEO Deborah Turness stepped down following criticism that a Panorama documentary misrepresented Trump’s words. The clip made it seem he urged supporters to march on the Capitol, while the actual speech included calls for a peaceful demonstration. Key details about the timeline of events were also omitted.

BBC chairman Samir Shah said he will apologise to the UK Parliament’s media committee. The resignations have drawn sharp reactions, including praise from Trump, who called the broadcaster “dishonest.”

The episode has raised questions about media trust and editorial standards at one of Britain’s most important public institutions.

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