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The BBC apologises to Scottish viewers live on air, and Twitter descends into a stooshie

Brian Finlay by Brian Finlay
24 August 2018
in Trending, UK
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On 23 August, the BBC issued an apology live on air. BBC News at One had incorrectly covered findings from the Government Expenditure and Revenue Scotland (GERS) report on 22 August, claiming that the Scottish government had “spent nearly 13 and a half billion pounds more than it raised”.

The apology

SNP strategist Ross Colquhoun took to Twitter to highlight the apology:

📺 @BBCNews has apologised for how it covered #GERS yesterday. They reported @ScotGov spent £13.5 billion more than it raised. This is incorrect as that figure covers *all* public sector expenditure in Scotland, including areas controlled by @number10gov and other public bodies. pic.twitter.com/dcR8fgKDYv

— Ross Colquhoun (@rosscolquhoun) August 23, 2018

BBC News originally claimed the Scottish government had spent £13.5 billion more than it had raised in revenue. However, that figure includes [paywall] all public expenditure in Scotland. It takes in all reserved areas that the UK government is responsible for and spending from other public bodies.

The BBC‘s apology came after SNP MSP Paul Wheelhouse called out the inaccuracy on 22 August:

This is disgraceful @BBCNews – Your presenter clearly states that GERS says “…the Scottish Government last year spent nearly £13.5Bn more than it raised…”. This is a really serious factual error & I expect to see a equally prominent/high profile apology to @DerekMackaySNP! pic.twitter.com/GbAgpSw5vV

— Paul Wheelhouse🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@PaulWheelhouse) August 22, 2018

So, Wheelhouse tweeted his appreciation of the BBC‘s “classy approach” and thanked the team for writing to him privately:

Fair play to @BBCNews for correcting yesterday’s mistake & doing so in a way that’s equally likely to have been seen by the same audience. I appreciate that move -a classy approach & thank the team also for writing to me privately to explain how they have addressed my concerns.👍 https://t.co/IwheUmo8Jy

— Paul Wheelhouse🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@PaulWheelhouse) August 23, 2018

The reaction

Scottish independence supporters were surprised by the apology being delivered in such a prominent way. The BBC‘s news coverage is often met with cynicism by SNP voters after a catalogue of accusations of pro-UK bias. In February 2017, the Herald conducted a poll which found [paywall] only one quarter of those asked felt the BBC was impartial on “issues surrounding [Scottish] independence.”

The reaction on Twitter echoed these findings:

https://twitter.com/PoliticsScot/status/1032618745578041344

One voter demanded to know who made “that mistake” in the first place:

Who made “that mistake”? Who loaded the autocue with drivel? We pay their salaries. If a @scotgov representative came out with guff like this he/ she would be mercilessly pilloried. It’s long overdue to #BBCSwitchOff

— John McKay #BelieveInScotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 (@johnmcinroe) August 23, 2018

And another expressed concerns about how BBC News allowed such an “error” to be broadcast:

https://twitter.com/X6ALV/status/1032620063982067712

Most noteworthy, one voter highlighted how BBC Scotland apologised for a similar error in 2016:

https://twitter.com/RhysWat57168899/status/1032617137037303814

Elected members and voters have held BBC News to account. However, Scottish Conservative elected members and the tabloids have also made similar statements.

The Tories and tabloids

After BBC News admitted fault [paywall], some felt Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson should do the same.

Davidson had tweeted similar claims about the GERS report:

Today's #GERS figures – straight from the Scottish Government – confirm the benefits of union. £1576 more spend per head than rest of UK. https://t.co/KmtYe7SAWw

— Ruth Davidson (@RuthDavidsonPC) August 22, 2018

On 23 August, SNP MSP Christina McKelvie took to twitter to call out Davidson on the need for an apology:

So now that the BBC has apologised when will @RuthDavidsonMSP and her pals apologise too for the fake news they spouted yesterday? #NotHoldingMyBreath

— Christina McKelvie (@ChristinaSNP) August 23, 2018

Right-wing tabloids, including the Scottish Daily Express, had also joined in:

Thursday's Scottish Daily Express front page #scotpapers #tomorrowspaperstoday pic.twitter.com/Hoe4gl1OUZ

— Scottish Express (@ScotExpress) August 22, 2018

And the Scottish Sun said:

Nicola Sturgeon says Scotland 'more than paid its way' as spending gap sky rocketshttps://t.co/wjgKj84N2B pic.twitter.com/2FrxyWWoAu

— The Scottish Sun (@ScottishSun) August 23, 2018

But interestingly, the Scottish Sun did manage to cover the BBC apology:

BBC apologises for mistake on ScotGov overspend – and Indy supporters are stunned https://t.co/FNWJN2edhD

— The Scottish Sun (@ScottishSun) August 23, 2018

The Scottish Conservatives should be as bold as BBC News and admit they made a mistake. But as McKelvie said, many voters will not be holding their breath.

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Featured Image: Tim Loudon/Flickr

Tags: scotlandSNP
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