The BBC is such a central part of our daily lives that until a government comes along determined to reform it (and that*s most governments) we tend to take it for granted. The academic community 每 specialist scholars and others alike 每 tend to see the BBC in a positive light, an institution that makes a major contribution to the ※good society§.
Not so Tom Mills, and if the subtitle of this book doesn*t give away his argument, then his PhD thesis (on which the book is based) certainly does 每 ※The end of social democracy and the rise of neoliberalism at the BBC§.
Mills* argument, cogently made and based on an impressive use of primary and secondary sources, represents a direct challenge to the notion of the BBC as a pillar of liberalism and social democracy, as it is so often characterised.
This is a notion that Mills contests. Making extensive use of the BBC*s written archives, he argues that since its creation the corporation has been, and continues to be, a central part of the state and its security apparatus 每 mainly because of the continuing ability of the UK*s elite to capture, and hold on to, the central functions of the BBC.
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This might be a relatively uncontroversial argument to make about the pre-war and wartime BBC. During the 1926 General Strike, for example, the BBC*s founding director general, John Reith, wrote that the government ※know that they can trust us not to be really impartial§; and throughout the 1930s and the Second World War, Mills illustrates, the BBC colluded with the government and security services to keep left-wing voices off the air.
However, more contentious is Mills* challenge to the keepers of the BBC*s official history 每 Asa Briggs and Jean Seaton in particular 每 who, he argues, have failed to see that the BBC is, and remains, in essence a state broadcaster. In his analysis of the BBC*s cooperation with MI5 in vetting left-wing staff or potential staff (a practice that continued until the 1980s), Mills makes a convincing case that the impetus to establish and sustain the vetting came more from the BBC than from MI5.
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He*s on less easy ground when it comes to demonstrating that the BBC has continued its collusion with the state. The corporation*s difficulties with governments 每 Conservative and Labour alike 每 over, for example, Northern Ireland and wars in the Falkland Islands and Iraq suggest otherwise. Mills argues that the BBC*s apparent conflict with the government over Iraq was more a reflection of a division of opinion among the elite 每 political and military 每 than it was proof of any fundamental opposition to the war itself.
He makes a strong case, but given the ferocity of the events surrounding the aftermath of the Iraq invasion, including the Hutton Inquiry and the resignations of the BBC*s chairman and director general, it is ultimately unconvincing.
But Mills might prove to be a better predictor of the future than an analyst of the past. Will Hutton, commenting on the government*s recent proposals for the BBC*s charter, wrote: ※The BBC is being redefined not as an autonomous organisation that expresses public service broadcasting on the licence-fee payers* behalf, but as a state corporation subject to state and party interference.§ If Hutton is right, then Mills* challenging analysis of the BBC*s past and present will become tomorrow*s reality.
Ivor Gaber is professor of journalism, University of Sussex, and was an independent editorial adviser to the BBC Trust.
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The BBC: Myth of a Public Service
By Tom Mills
Verso, 272pp, ?16.99 and ?14.99
ISBN 9781784784829 and 4850 (e-book)
Published 15 November 2016
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