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Kevin Bakhurst
Kevin Bakhurst
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Kevin Bakhurst (born December 1965) is an English journalist and media executive who has been the Director General of RTÉ, the Irish national broadcaster, since July 2023. He previously served as the managing director of news and current affairs and deputy Director General at RTÉ from 2012 to 2016, and before that as group director of content and media policy at the UK regulator Ofcom.

Key Information

Career

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Bakhurst attended Haberdashers' Aske's School in Elstree and then St John's College, Cambridge where he read French and German. After a brief spell of working at Price Waterhouse, he joined the BBC in 1989, first as a researcher and then as an assistant producer at the BBC Business and Economics Unit.

In 1990 he was promoted to producer of the BBC Nine O'Clock News, where he remained until he moved to Brussels in 1994 to gain further experience for BBC News. In 1996, after two years in Brussels, he returned to the UK to become the assistant editor on the BBC Nine O'Clock News, remaining with the programme when it became the BBC Ten O'Clock News. From 2001 to 2003 he was an editor at the BBC News channel, and followed that by being named acting editor of the BBC Ten O'Clock News. He was then confirmed as the permanent editor of the programme in March 2004. During his two years as editor of the BBC Ten O'Clock News it won two Baftas for its coverage of the Madrid Bombings and the 2005 London Tube bombings, and a Royal Television Society award for News Programme of The Year. He was formerly the controller of the BBC News channel, a position he held from December 2005 until September 2012,[1] and was also controller of the BBC News at One bulletin. In May 2010 he became deputy head of the BBC Newsroom.

From September 2012 to October 2016, Bakhurst was the managing director of news and current affairs at Ireland's national public service broadcaster RTÉ.[2] He also served as acting Director General for a six-month period.[3]

In April 2023, RTÉ announced the appointment of Bakhurst as the next Director General of RTÉ from July following an extensive and competitive recruitment process.[4]

References

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from Grokipedia
Kevin Bakhurst (born December 1965) is an English media executive and former who has served as Director-General of Raidió Teilifís Éireann (), Ireland's broadcaster, since July 2023. He was appointed to lead the organization amid a major payments involving undisclosed executive expenses and licensing fee mismanagement, which prompted government intervention and public scrutiny. Bakhurst, who previously held senior roles at from 2011 to 2017, including Managing Director of and Current Affairs and briefly Deputy Director-General, returned after serving as Group Director for Broadcasting and Online Content at , the 's communications regulator. Educated at Haberdashers' Aske's School and , where he studied French and German, Bakhurst began his career at the in 1990, rising to editor of the BBC Ten O'Clock News from 2003 to 2005 and later Controller of the News Channel. His tenure at has focused on cost-saving measures, including voluntary redundancies targeting over 100 job reductions in 2025, amid ongoing financial reforms to restore public trust and ensure sustainability. Bakhurst has also navigated controversies such as executive exit packages and salary adjustments, while affirming 's commitment to international events like the despite geopolitical tensions.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Kevin Bakhurst was born in December 1965 in Barnet, . His parents are Chris Bakhurst, who is retired, and Liz Bakhurst, who has publicly supported former British Labour Party leader . Bakhurst's mother was born and raised in , , and later returned there with her family, including Bakhurst and his children, for her 70th birthday to share her roots. The family's history intersects with South African apartheid; Bakhurst's cousin, , was imprisoned for nearly 10 years due to his membership in the (ANC). Little is publicly documented about Bakhurst's immediate siblings or specific childhood experiences beyond these familial ties.

Academic Background

Bakhurst was educated at Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School, an independent day school in , , north of . He subsequently attended St John's College at the from 1985 to 1988, where he studied modern languages, specializing in French and German.

BBC Career

Early Roles and Rise in News Division

Bakhurst joined the BBC in 1989 as a researcher in the Business and Economics Unit, soon advancing to assistant producer in the same unit. In 1990, he was promoted to producer on the BBC Nine O'Clock News, handling production duties for the flagship bulletin. From 1994 to 1995, Bakhurst gained international experience as a producer based in , contributing to coverage of European affairs. Returning to , he served as assistant editor on both the Nine O'Clock News and Ten O'Clock News from 1996 to 2001, overseeing editorial operations and story development for these key evening programs. In 2001, Bakhurst transitioned to the emerging 24-hour news format as an editor at BBC News 24, focusing on live event coordination and output scheduling. By 2003, he was appointed acting editor of the BBC Ten O'Clock News, a position confirmed in March 2004; during his tenure, the program received a BAFTA award for its coverage of the 2004 bombings, an RTS News Event award for the crisis, and a second BAFTA for the . Bakhurst's ascent continued in December 2005 when he was named controller of the BBC News Channel (formerly News 24) and BBC News at One O'Clock, roles in which the channel earned RTS News Channel of the Year honors in 2005 and 2008, including recognition for its coverage. In May 2010, he was elevated to deputy head of the , second-in-command in the division's editorial structure, overseeing integrated news operations across television, radio, and online platforms. This progression from junior production roles to senior editorial leadership over two decades underscored his expertise in news management amid evolving media demands, such as the shift to continuous coverage.

Leadership of BBC News Channel

Kevin Bakhurst was appointed Controller of 24 on 16 December 2005, succeeding Richard Sambrook in the newly created position that replaced the prior editor role. Prior to this, he had served as editor of the BBC Ten O'Clock News from 2003 to 2005, during which the bulletin received BAFTA and awards for coverage of events including the Madrid bombings. His appointment came amid efforts to strengthen the channel's editorial leadership, as 24 had lagged behind competitor in viewership for several years. In May 2006, under Bakhurst's oversight, the channel introduced new titles and a redesigned set for its bulletins, aiming to refresh its on-air presentation. This was followed by a major rebranding on 21 April 2008, when BBC News 24 was renamed the BBC News Channel to emphasize integrated news output across television, online, and radio platforms, reflecting broader convergence initiatives. Bakhurst contributed to these changes as part of the channel's evolution toward multimedia integration, including enhanced coordination with and radio services. The channel achieved recognition during Bakhurst's tenure, winning a Golden Nymph award at the Television Festival in 2007 for its coverage. He also served on the BBC's management team for the 2012 London Olympics, coordinating operations across outlets. In May 2010, Bakhurst assumed the additional role of Deputy Head of the , where he supervised television , radio , and the website alongside his channel responsibilities. Bakhurst departed the in July 2012 to become Managing Director of News and Current Affairs at , ending his seven-year leadership of the channel. During his time, the channel maintained its focus on rolling news coverage of global events, including the 9/11 aftermath and other major stories from his earlier roles that informed his editorial approach.

First Stint at RTÉ

Appointment and News Management

Kevin Bakhurst was appointed Managing Director of and Current Affairs in July 2012, following the retirement of the previous incumbent, Ed Mulhall. He assumed the position in early September 2012, relocating from the where he had served as Controller of the Channel. The appointment aimed to bring external expertise to strengthen 's news operations amid ongoing economic pressures on . Concurrently with his news role, Bakhurst was designated Deputy Director General from 2012, a position he held until October 2016, providing oversight across broader organizational functions while prioritizing news leadership. In managing and Current Affairs, which encompassed television bulletins, radio programs, online platforms, and investigative units, Bakhurst emphasized editorial rigor and multi-platform delivery, drawing on his experience to integrate digital and broadcast news more cohesively. Early in his tenure, he initiated plans for internal reorganization to enhance efficiency and adaptability in news production, addressing structural silos inherited from prior leadership. Under Bakhurst's direction, the division maintained comprehensive coverage of national events, including the aftermath of Ireland's and political developments, while upholding impartiality standards mandated for public service media. He focused on talent development and resource allocation to sustain output across RTÉ's One News service and current affairs programs like , without reported major scandals in news operations during his period. Bakhurst departed RTÉ in October 2016 to join as Group Director of Content and Media Policy, citing professional opportunities rather than internal conflicts as the motivation.

Key Initiatives and Departures

During his tenure as Managing Director of News and Current Affairs from September 2012, Kevin Bakhurst prioritized restoring public and internal trust in RTÉ's following scandals such as the 2011 Investigates libel case involving Fr. Kevin Reynolds and the Tweetgate controversy during the campaign. He led the creation of the RTÉ Investigations Unit in the aftermath of controversies like the Mission to Prey documentary, which produced targeted investigative programming on topics including charity sector abuses, crèche standards, and care home neglect. These efforts included implementing stricter guidelines to enhance standards in investigative reporting and rebuild staff morale amid prior low confidence. Facing financial pressures, with RTÉ's overall revenue at €327.6 million in 2013, Bakhurst drove modernization of the , expanding digital output to capitalize on rising penetration and news consumption in Ireland. To avert closures of regional news bases amid budget cuts, he forged partnerships with local institutes of technology, enabling continued local reporting without additional RTÉ expenditure. These initiatives contributed to sustained high-quality output, including defenses of journalistic independence during politically charged moments, such as securing approval in 2015 to broadcast Dáil statements on businessman Denis O'Brien's IBRC loan dealings. Bakhurst briefly served as Deputy Director-General before departing in October 2016 to join as Content Group Director, a role focused on regulating media content including the . His exit involved no or scheme, reflecting a standard career transition rather than any internal dispute.

Ofcom Tenure

Role in Content Regulation

During his tenure at Ofcom from October 2016 to April 2023, Kevin Bakhurst served as Group Director for Content and Media Policy, later evolving into Group Director for Broadcasting and Online Content, where he oversaw the regulation of broadcast standards, including impartiality, harm, and offence rules under the Broadcasting Code. His responsibilities encompassed setting strategy and policy for UK broadcasting regulation, implementing frameworks for video-on-demand services, and leading enforcement of the BBC's content standards as mandated by its Royal Charter, which requires Ofcom to ensure programmes do not breach standards on accuracy, impartiality, and privacy. Bakhurst's division handled complaints and investigations into breaches, applying sanctions only post-broadcast to avoid preemptive censorship, a principle he emphasized in public statements on maintaining freedom of expression while upholding due impartiality. A key aspect of Bakhurst's role involved addressing challenges in news and current affairs, particularly regarding politicians' involvement in programming. In March 2023, he clarified Ofcom's rules under Broadcasting Code Rule 5.1, stating that politicians could not present news or current affairs if it risked undermining , though exceptions applied for non-news formats like documentaries, provided editorial control remained with the broadcaster. This guidance came amid scrutiny over shows featuring serving politicians, with Bakhurst stressing the need for "clear separation" between political roles and broadcasting to prevent bias, a stance informed by Ofcom's prior findings of breaches in similar cases. Bakhurst also directed Ofcom's oversight of content, issuing public criticisms on transparency and compliance. In October 2019, following an investigation into presenter Naga Munchetty's comments on , under his leadership rebuked the for lacking transparency in its internal complaints process, noting that the corporation's partial upholding of the grievance without full disclosure undermined public trust in regulatory accountability. His team enforced standards on harmful content, including protections for children and prohibitions on offensive material, while contributing to consultations on extending regulation to online harms without . In parliamentary evidence in October 2018, Bakhurst highlighted 's broadcasting expertise as a foundation for potential , advocating for targeted interventions based on evidence of harm rather than broad . By 2023, as Bakhurst departed, his role had influenced updates to the Broadcasting Code, including reviews for 's 20th anniversary, though his position was restructured to exclude direct oversight of online content regulation, reflecting shifts toward the Online Safety Act. Throughout, his approach prioritized post-broadcast accountability and evidence-based enforcement, with issuing over 1,000 broadcast sanctions annually during this period, many related to content standards breaches.

Contributions to Media Policy

During his tenure at Ofcom from 2016 to 2023, Kevin Bakhurst served as Group Director for Content and Media Policy, later transitioning to Group Director for and Content, where he oversaw the development and implementation of broadcast strategy and policy frameworks, including the external regulation of the following the transfer of oversight responsibilities in 2017. Under his leadership, applied content standards to the , emphasizing due impartiality and accuracy in news and current affairs programming, with policies requiring the broadcaster to maintain transparency in complaint handling and editorial decision-making. Bakhurst contributed to policy on due by enforcing rules against biased coverage, such as the 2018 decision fining RT £200,000 for repeated failures in preserving on programs like Worlds Apart, a ruling upheld through subsequent appeals. He also clarified regulatory guidance on politicians presenting television and radio content, stressing that such appearances must not undermine or give undue prominence to political views, particularly during election periods or sensitive topics. In online media policy, Bakhurst led Ofcom's preparations for the Online Safety Act, building a team of approximately 350 staff focused on data analytics, , and to address illegal and harmful content while prioritizing of expression. He provided parliamentary on the Online Safety Bill in 2022, advocating for proportionate regulation of platforms to mitigate risks like child exploitation without overreach into lawful speech. Additionally, during the , he issued guidance in May 2020 reminding broadcasters of obligations under the Broadcasting Code to ensure factual accuracy and avoid undue alarm in coverage of public health information. Bakhurst advanced policies promoting diversity in broadcasting, reporting in 2019 that on-screen representation had improved significantly but off-screen roles lagged, urging sustained progress through quotas and monitoring. His work underscored Ofcom's role in fostering a competitive yet accountable media environment, including reflections in 2021 on the importance of impartial news sources amid declining trust in traditional outlets.

Return to RTÉ as Director General

Appointment Amid Scandal

In April 2023, 's board selected Kevin Bakhurst, formerly Ofcom's chief executive, as the new to succeed , whose seven-year term was set to end on July 11. The choice followed a recruitment process initiated amid growing scrutiny of 's governance under Forbes, including financial mismanagement in projects like the 2022 "," which incurred losses of approximately €2.2 million despite projected profits. Bakhurst's appointment was described by the board as unanimous and was approved by the Irish cabinet on April 18, positioning him to bring external regulatory experience to address internal challenges. The selection process, however, sparked controversy due to leaks from confidential board meetings, which revealed internal debates over candidates including Bakhurst and CEO David McRedmond. These disclosures, reported in April 2023, included details of a planned board vote to endorse Bakhurst, prompting recriminations among directors and calls for the leaker to resign. board chair Siún Ní Raghallaigh described the leaks as "unfortunate," noting they undermined the confidentiality expected in executive searches. Critics, including some media observers, questioned the transparency and rigor of the process, especially given 's and prior lapses. The appointment unfolded against an intensifying crisis when, on June 22, 2023, disclosed €345,000 in previously unreported payments to presenter from 2017 to 2022, tied to a commercial arrangement with . This revelation, involving inaccurate reporting to the board, led to ' suspension and resignation on June 26, accelerating the leadership vacuum. Bakhurst, whose start was originally scheduled for July, assumed the role on July 10 and promptly disbanded the executive board on his first day, citing the need for fresh accountability amid the scandal's fallout, which eroded public trust and prompted government reviews.

Reforms and Financial Overhaul

Upon assuming the role of in June 2023, Kevin Bakhurst initiated a comprehensive overhaul to address 's structural inefficiencies and financial vulnerabilities exposed by the payments scandal, including a projected €61 million drop in licence fee revenue for 2023-2024. In November 2023, published "A New Direction," a ten-point transformation plan emphasizing , operational streamlining, and enhanced , with initial savings of €5 million achieved in 2023 and €10 million targeted for 2024. Central to the financial reforms was a workforce reduction of approximately 400 positions—20% of RTÉ's 1,800 staff—by 2028, primarily through voluntary redundancies to minimize compulsory layoffs and associated costs. The scheme, offering up to six weeks' pay per year of service for those with over 10 years, opened in 2024 but faced delays in approval, with only 40 redundancies completed that year despite plans for more; by September 2025, over 100 jobs were on track to be shed, supported by €15 million in state funding at an average payout of €118,000 per departure. These measures contributed to a €9.1 million deficit in 2023's , framed by Bakhurst as a controlled outcome amid scrutiny rather than unchecked losses. Pay reforms included salary caps for presenters and executives, with reductions for high earners and improved HR systems to prevent future issues; for instance, Bakhurst's own €250,000 salary was positioned within new bands, potentially rising to €300,000 under proposals, though tied to metrics. Complementary efficiencies targeted outdated IT systems, resulting in a €3.6 million write-down in 2025, which Bakhurst described as a necessary modernization step distinct from prior scandals. The June 2024 "Statement of Strategy 2025-2029" built on these efforts, outlining sustained reforms amid a €725 million multi-year —€225 million in 2025 rising to €260 million by 2027—conditioned on meeting annual targets like quotas to avoid market distortion criticisms from commercial rivals. Delays in approvals, however, incurred additional millions in costs, underscoring ongoing dependencies on political sign-off despite Bakhurst's emphasis on internal efficiencies for long-term viability.

Ongoing Challenges and Achievements as of 2025

As , Bakhurst has advanced RTÉ's 2025-2029, which emphasizes organizational transformation, financial , and maintaining an independent amid declining traditional revenues. Key achievements include substantial progress on workforce reduction, with schemes attracting interest from over 300 employees and resulting in more than 100 job departures in 2025 as part of a multi-year target to cut 400 positions overall. These measures, alongside confirmed public funding allocations in Budget 2026, aim to address chronic deficits and support content innovation. Persistent challenges include the unresolved fallout from the 2023 payments scandal, with yet to recover €150,000 owed by former presenter despite ongoing legal and communication efforts. Financial strains endure, evidenced by a €3.6 million operating loss in the prior year—partly from €750,000 in IT system impairments and staff costs—and projected €15 million in 2025 redundancy payouts, averaging €118,000 per participant. Revenue audits by Irish tax authorities extended into 2025, complicating recovery efforts. Reform initiatives face external hurdles, including delays in government approval for structural changes and funding models, which Bakhurst and executives attribute to ministerial inaction despite internal readiness. Public trust restoration remains incomplete, with committees noting high levels of lingering anger over past governance failures during 2025 hearings. Impartiality critiques have intensified, particularly over 's handling of international coverage; Israel's ambassador to accused the broadcaster of anti-Israel in questioning the country's 2025 Eurovision participation, undermining claims of neutrality. Separate allegations from advocacy groups highlighted disproportionate focus in Gaza-related reporting, though defended its output as balanced. Bakhurst has publicly addressed internal lapses, such as expressing fury over negative reactions to a promotional video perceived as unprofessional, signaling ongoing cultural and perceptual battles. Critics, including outlets like Gript, contend exhibits systemic left-leaning on domestic issues, though Bakhurst maintains reforms prioritize factual rigor over external narratives.

Controversies and Criticisms

Handling of RTÉ Payment Scandals

Upon assuming the role of on July 10, 2023, Bakhurst's initial action was to stand down 's entire executive board amid revelations of undisclosed payments totaling approximately €345,000 to presenter between 2017 and 2022, which had been misrepresented in annual reports. These payments involved underwriting advances through Tubridy's agent, Noel Kelly, for purported promotional events, some of which did not materialize, leading to public and parliamentary scrutiny over transparency and governance failures. In his first public testimony before the Oireachtas Public Accounts Committee on July 13, 2023, Bakhurst characterized the episode as "one of [RTÉ's] most shameful," acknowledging that the broadcaster had misled the public and damaged trust, while pledging comprehensive reforms to prevent recurrence. He suspended payments to Tubridy pending renegotiation of terms, stating no salary was being disbursed as contract levels remained unresolved due to eroded trust, and emphasized that bore no obligation to apologize to the presenter. Bakhurst also initiated internal audits and external reviews of all high-value contracts, including arrangements, to address systemic issues in payment reporting and agent negotiations. To mitigate financial fallout from the , which contributed to a projected €61 million drop in license fee revenue across 2023–2024, Bakhurst implemented a recruitment freeze and halted in September 2023, framing these as necessary for restoring accountability. By December 2023, he reported concluding the year in a "reasonable place" financially, distinguishing operational losses from the deliberate misreporting in the scandals. However, recovery efforts persisted into 2025, with €150,000 in disputed payments for unheld events remaining unrepaid by Tubridy as of May, and ongoing commercial dealings with agent Noel Kelly. Reflecting in October 2024, Bakhurst described the period as a "testing time" that overshadowed staff dedication but necessitated cultural shifts toward greater transparency, including enhanced oversight of executive and talent remuneration to rebuild public confidence. Critics, including some politicians, argued that government funding approvals post-scandal effectively rewarded mismanagement, a claim Bakhurst rejected, asserting reforms had addressed root causes without excusing prior lapses.

Questions on Impartiality and Bias

Criticisms of 's under Kevin Bakhurst's directorship have centered on perceived imbalances in coverage of international conflicts, particularly the Israel-Gaza war. In January 2024, the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign accused of systemic in its reporting on Gaza, alleging that the broadcaster prioritized Israeli perspectives and underreported Palestinian casualties and humanitarian impacts, with only sporadic counterbalancing stories in preceding months. Israel's ambassador to echoed concerns of anti-Israel bias in May 2025, stating that could not claim after its programming questioned Israel's eligibility for the amid the conflict, framing the broadcaster's stance as politically motivated rather than neutral. Domestically, conservative commentators and outlets have questioned RTÉ's adherence to impartiality standards, attributing persistent "groupthink" to an institutional culture that favors progressive viewpoints on issues like immigration, EU policies, and Irish politics. A September 2025 analysis described RTÉ as "institutionally biased" on major debates, citing uneven scrutiny of government narratives versus opposition critiques. Bakhurst, who previously denied groupthink as RTÉ's deputy director general in March 2015—asserting no single editorial monopoly exists and political bias claims lack evidence—reiterated defenses in June 2025 amid renewed accusations, despite his 2023 appointment following scandals that highlighted internal homogeneity. Partisan figures have amplified these questions; leader defended a party proposal in November 2024 to scrutinize RTÉ's Gaza coverage for potential pro-establishment leanings, reflecting ideological divides in perceptions of balance. Such critiques persist despite Bakhurst's oversight of regulatory compliance from his prior role, where enforcement was emphasized, raising doubts about whether structural reforms have addressed underlying causal factors like staff demographics and sourcing patterns that empirical analyses link to left-leaning tilts in public media. Bakhurst has maintained that RTÉ's processes ensure diverse viewpoints, but the multiplicity of sourced complaints underscores ongoing scrutiny of output neutrality as of October 2025.

Public and Political Backlash

In February 2024, revelations about substantial severance payments to departing executives, including €450,000 to former Richard Crowley, sparked renewed controversy and eroded confidence among government officials in Bakhurst's leadership. Critics argued the payouts exemplified ongoing poor despite his reforms, with one analysis attributing the issue directly to decisions under his tenure. Public and political backlash intensified in May 2025 over a €3.6 million write-down on a partially failed IT project intended to replace RTÉ's finance and HR systems. Senior government sources expressed concern that Bakhurst had been deliberately kept uninformed by subordinates, raising questions about his oversight of major expenditures funded by public money. Bakhurst described the loss as "extremely regrettable" but distinct from prior scandals due to its scale and transparency, while defending RTÉ's internal processes before committees. The same month, a promotional video depicting RTÉ's —featuring paid as staff and costing €77,000 to produce—drew sharp public criticism for misleading portrayals amid ongoing trust erosion from earlier scandals. Bakhurst expressed fury at media coverage he deemed "totally inaccurate," but the episode fueled perceptions of tone-deaf spending at a time when licence fee revenues had declined 4% in 2024 compared to 2023. Politicians, including members of the Oireachtas Joint Committee on Communications, pressed Bakhurst on these incidents, linking them to broader demands for in RTÉ's €725 million multi-year deal secured in 2024. He rejected assertions that the rewarded inefficiency, emphasizing cost-saving measures like projected €15 million in 2025 redundancies averaging €118,000 per employee, yet skepticism persisted regarding his ability to restore public confidence.

Views on Media Impartiality

Positions on Regulatory Standards

Bakhurst has consistently supported robust regulatory frameworks for to uphold and accuracy, drawing from his experience at , where he oversaw content standards and policy, including the regulation of the and video-on-demand services. As Group Director for and Content, he emphasized that regulatory rules on politicians presenting programs are essential to prevent any perception of , stating that such appearances must not undermine due or the audience's trust in news output. He argued that while broadcasters have latitude to air controversial or offensive material, they must balance this with obligations for fairness and evidence-based decision-making in enforcement. In the context of online content , Bakhurst advocated for measures that protect while addressing harms, cautioning against overreach that could stifle expression; he highlighted the need for to evolve with without eroding core principles like . This perspective informed his approach at , where he has prioritized compliance with Irish regulatory bodies such as Coimisiún na Meán, implementing enhanced governance aligned with semi-state standards to ensure adherence to rules on independence and fairness. Under his leadership at since July 2023, Bakhurst has enforced stricter internal policies on staff external activities to safeguard , including a register of interests that requires disclosure of outside work and payments, positioning this as aligned with best practices recommended by bodies like the Standards in Public Office Commission. He has linked these measures directly to maintaining regulatory standards, noting in submissions that enhanced training and surveys for news and current affairs teams are critical for upholding amid public scrutiny. Bakhurst maintains that such proactive compliance rebuilds audience trust without compromising editorial freedom, rejecting claims of inherent bias while affirming the necessity of enforceable rules over self-regulation alone.

Critiques of Broadcaster Practices

During his time as Ofcom's Group Director for Broadcasting and Online Content, Kevin Bakhurst critiqued broadcaster practices that compromised due impartiality, particularly those involving active politicians in on-air roles. He emphasized that serving politicians are prohibited from acting as newsreaders, interviewers, or reporters in news programs due to the inherent risk of undermining impartiality, but permitted to present current affairs shows provided broadcasters implement strict editorial controls, including challenging partisan views and ensuring a balanced range of perspectives either within the program or across linked output. Bakhurst warned that inadequate oversight—such as failing to treat a program as news when it includes significant unchallenged political content—constitutes a breach of Broadcasting Code Rule 5.1, which mandates news be reported with due accuracy and presented impartially. Bakhurst's regulatory actions highlighted specific lapses, as seen in Ofcom's 2023 findings against for episodes of State of the Nation where Conservative MPs interviewed Chancellor without sufficient challenge to government policy claims on economic issues like tax cuts and borrowing. These programs, despite being labeled current affairs, were ruled to have breached due because they effectively functioned as by reporting on current political matters without balancing alternative viewpoints, illustrating Bakhurst's critique of misclassification tactics that evade scrutiny. He underscored that "due" demands proportionality to the topic's , rejecting rigid equivalency but insisting on adequate representation to prevent undue prominence of one side's opinions. In broader terms, Bakhurst advocated for practices that sustain in , critiquing reliance on self-regulation without robust challenge mechanisms, as evidenced by Ofcom's interventions in cases like unchallenged political interviews. He argued that broadcasters must prioritize over presenter affiliations, with failures eroding audience confidence in media fairness, a view informed by surveys showing higher trust in TV news for compared to unregulated platforms. These standards, he noted, apply especially during elections, where lax practices amplify risks of bias.

References

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