Donald Trump says BBC 'defrauded the public' with editing of January 6 speech
President Donald Trump speaks to reporters (Jacquelyn Martin/AP)
US president Donald Trump said the BBC âdefrauded the publicâ and that he had an âobligationâ to take legal action over the editing of a speech.
Director-general Tim Davie quit on Sunday amid a scandal over the editing of a speech by Mr Trump before the attack on the US Capitol on January 6 2021.
Mr Trump reiterated his threat of launching a $1bn (âŹ863m) legal action during an interview on Fox News.
He said: âI think I have an obligation to do it, you canât allow people to do that.
âI guess I have to. They defrauded the public and theyâve admitted it. This is within one of our great allies, supposedly our great ally.
âThatâs a pretty sad event. They actually changed my January 6 speech, which was a beautiful speech, which was a very calming speech, and they made it sound radical.
âThey showed me the results of how they butchered it up. It was very dishonest and the head man quit and a lot of the other people quit.â
A legal letter, from Trump counsel Alejandro Brito, has demanded that âfalse, defamatory, disparaging, and inflammatory statementsâ made about Mr Trump be retracted immediately.
The letter says if the BBC âdoes not complyâ, Mr Trump will be âleft with no alternative but to enforce his legal and equitable rights, all of which are expressly reserved and are not waived, including by filing legal action for no less than $1,000,000,000 in damagesâ.
Mr Trumpâs comments come after British culture secretary Lisa Nandy said the BBC must ârenew its mission for the modern ageâ and warned MPs attacking the broadcaster to âconsider just what is at stakeâ.
The once-a-decade process of reviewing the broadcasterâs charter will begin shortly, with Ms Nandy saying it would ensure a BBC which is âfiercely independentâ and âgenuinely accountableâ to the public it serves.
She told the House of Commons: âThere is a fundamental difference between raising serious concerns over editorial failings and members of this House launching a sustained attack on the institution itself, because the BBC is not just a broadcaster, it is a national institution that belongs to us all.â
The BBCâs charter expires at the end of 2027 and the process of reviewing it is now set to begin with the organisation at the centre of a storm following the resignations of Mr Davie and Deborah Turness, who quit as chief executive of BBC News.
Ms Nandy said the charter review process will begin imminently, telling MPs: âTogether, we will ensure the BBC is sustainably funded, commands the publicâs trust and continues to drive growth, good jobs, skills and creativity across every region and nation of the UK.
âIn an era in which trust is fraying and truth is contested across our nation, it will ensure the BBC remains fiercely independent and is genuinely accountable to the public it serves.â
Mr Davie told BBC staff the corporation has to âstand up for our journalismâ, insisting it will control its own narrative which âwill not just be given by our enemiesâ.
In remarks to BBC staff seen by the PA news agency, he said: âWe are a unique and precious organisation, and I see the free press under pressure, I see the weaponisation. I think weâve got to fight for our journalism.
âIâm really proud of our work, and the amazing work locally, globally, that weâre doing is utterly precious.â
He added: âWe have made some mistakes that have cost us, but we need to fight for that.
âAnd Iâm fiercely proud of that, and donât let anyone stop you from thinking that we are doing a fantastic job.â





