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Opinion

The BBC is sorry. Not

Even as its two most senior employees resign, the corporation seems as unwilling as ever to tackle the root cause of the scandal

November 10, 2025 16:26
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Tim Davie and Deborah Turness (Image: Getty)
3 min read

To understand this latest BBC crisis, it’s instructive to remember Robert Conquest's third law of politics: the behaviour of any bureaucratic organisation can best be understood by assuming that it is controlled by a secret cabal of its enemies.

The “sorry not sorry” attitude of the BBC’s chairman and its departing CEO of news today is otherwise almost inexplicable.

We’re all used to those political non-apologies in which someone tells us they are sorry “for any offence caused” rather than for the substance of what they have said or done.

Now we have the BBC’s version, with its chairman Samir Shah telling us he is sorry for the “error of judgment” in splicing together two separate parts of a Donald Trump speech, and with the BBC’s CEO of news, Deborah Turness, insisting that she is going only because “the buck stops with me”.

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BBC