Question Time bias - evidence

I would class myself as centre left. About 2 years ago I would agree that QT was heavily weighted towards the Conservatives and the right. BUT over the last year especially, post Party Gate, I personally think the show has given a bigger voice to the centre left.

The Tory might be allowed more time to speak but it's mostly rubbish that they are talking and the audience knows it. Bruce takes comments from the audience and hardly anyone supports what the Tory says. I think that the public see this too.

It's like giving them enough rope to hang themselves. When the Tories or the right tell us it's not their fault for high energy costs, inflation, non existent growth, cuts, NHS backlogs etc no one believes them and it just makes them look even more stupid.

Maybe QT is trying to be more 'right wing' biased but I don't think it is currently working!
 
QT is absolute shyte, and has gone right down the U-Bend since Dimbleby stepped down and the Tories appointed Tory doners / chums to senior positions in the BBC.

And continually giving Oakshott/ Hately-Bewer / Tufton St think tanks a platform, unchallenged, is very, very dangerous.
 
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Is Fiona Bruce the problem, or is Question Time?​

No one knows if BBC bias, sexism or soundbite politics is to blame.
By Zoë Grünewald

Every Thursday evening, furious viewers mass on Twitter to denounce BBC One’s Question Time. Fiona Bruce, the host, is deemed “irritating” and “rude” and seemingly winds up just about everyone, while viewers across the spectrum cry “bias!” without anyone being able to agree on which side her supposed bias lies.

Described simultaneously as anti-Brexit, pro-Tory and a “left-wing mouthpiece”, Bruce has inadvertently made herself the figurehead for the culture war in broadcasting, where the right accuse the BBC of wokeism, and the left accuse the BBC of pandering to the establishment. On 23 June, Bruce asked the RMT union boss Mick Lynch whether driving up public sector wages would increase inflation, seemingly in the place of the treasury minister Rachel Maclean, who was on the panel. It is possible that the BBC is nervous of the supposed left-wing bias that has been used as a justification for slashing the licence fee, and it may be that Bruce bears this in mind while presenting.

However, audiences should know that impartiality in broadcasting doesn’t require all sides to be given equal weight. BBC editorial guidelines note that due impartiality does not require “absolute neutrality on every issue”, but that presenters must be inclusive and ensure that the “existence of a range of views is appropriately reflected”. Frustratingly, but perhaps reasonably, this means that not all parts of the spectrum will get their fair share of the allotted time. It is also worth remembering that the Question Time audience is deliberately selected to reflect the political demographics of the country. So, although Bruce is accused of selecting the “Tory plant’s questions”, she is simply statistically more likely to select someone who voted Conservative than Labour.

We must also bear in mind the unforgiving scrutiny of female journalists. One only has to scroll through mentions of Bruce’s name on Twitter to see blatant and more subtle sexism. I wonder if David Dimbleby or Andrew Neil had to deal with random men publicly discussing whether or not they’d have sex with them. Given she is described as “bossy” and “disrespectful”, it is possible that viewers are sensitive to her interjections because it feels much more jarring when it comes from a woman. Dimbleby certainly held his panellists to account (interrupting, scoffing and moving on quickly), but perhaps it felt more palatable and authoritative coming from an older, white man.

Ultimately Bruce’s treatment is more of a symptom of the public’s exasperation with the format used in Question Time. At its inception Question Time had more purpose. In 1979 it was an important means of democratic accountability. It gave small, fairly representative parts of the population access to politicians and the chance to ask them challenging questions. Everyone should have seen themselves, or their views, represented in some way and it represented a tangible link between the public and the establishment. Now, Question Time merely exists in the flood of news and endless fighting. Even established politicians have a reputation for repeating untruths or obfuscating. Media are no longer trusted to represent facts accurately. Breaking news and hot takes come from Twitter and Facebook, and everything has to be broken down into a thirty second soundbite. Moreover, Question Time is broadcast late on Thursday nights, too late for anyone to have a coherent thought; people are exhausted and have opted for a gin and tonic (or two).

Among the guests are journalists, activists and politicians, but also the odd inflammatory commentator, presumably to provide clips for social media. Notable previous guests include Billie Piper’s tension headache and ex-husband Laurence Fox in January 2020 and the controversial academic Jordan Peterson late last year. The audience then have just an hour to question this motley crew on the chaotic political landscape. Scotland breaking away from the Union? Ten minutes. Cost-of-living crisis? Five minutes. Repeatedly gaslit by our government? Two minutes, max. An audience member gets about twenty seconds before being cut off, otherwise there’s no way of fitting everything in. The only way to continue the conversation is through people shouting at each other on Twitter about it (which they do, with gusto).
https://www.newstatesman.com/spotli...-londons-ev-infrastructure-at-speed-and-scale

In a world where anyone can put their questions and grievances to the establishment at any given time but no one trusts the answers, where female journalists elicit a disproportionate level of scrutiny and venom, and where the BBC can’t catch a break, one must wonder why anyone watches Question Time at all. To be honest, its future is, well, questionable.
 
I would class myself as centre left. About 2 years ago I would agree that QT was heavily weighted towards the Conservatives and the right. BUT over the last year especially, post Party Gate, I personally think the show has given a bigger voice to the centre left.

The Tory might be allowed more time to speak but it's mostly rubbish that they are talking and the audience knows it. Bruce takes comments from the audience and hardly anyone supports what the Tory says. I think that the public see this too.

It's like giving them enough rope to hang themselves. When the Tories or the right tell us it's not their fault for high energy costs, inflation, non existent growth, cuts, NHS backlogs etc no one believes them and it just makes them look even more stupid.

Maybe QT is trying to be more 'right wing' biased but I don't think it is currently working!
The party in power is naturally there to be shot at. And rightly so. For the opposition when facing challenge the default is to simply say 'we aren't in power so nothing to do with us'. Again, rightly so. The subjects discussed on QT are the fiery hot topics of the day and are generally extremely emotive. Hence, what do people expect? A nice afternoon tea type chit chat? Fingers and toes crossed labour make a better fist of running the country when their time comes but for SKS and his team it could very well be a case of careful what you wish for. QT awaits...
 
The party in power is naturally there to be shot at. And rightly so. For the opposition when facing challenge the default is to simply say 'we aren't in power so nothing to do with us'. Again, rightly so. The subjects discussed on QT are the fiery hot topics of the day and are generally extremely emotive. Hence, what do people expect? A nice afternoon tea type chit chat? Fingers and toes crossed labour make a better fist of running the country when their time comes but for SKS and his team it could very well be a case of careful what you wish for. QT awaits...
Think most people want a debate, both sides of the political spectrum putting their points across..... not carefully selected panellists there given a platform to rattle off their sinister agendas. Or planted audience members. Or ministers telling blatant lies - they know it, we know it, but they plough on toeing the party line being good little politicians. Or know nothing smart ar*e journalists who think they have the answers to everything.

It used to be good, but pretty much typifies British politics over the past 10-15 years - it's disappeared into the swamp.
 
I honestly don’t think giving any of the right biased panelist's more air time shows bias…
I think it’s more cleverly giving them the rope to hang them selves with, because they constantly show their ideology up…
 
I honestly don’t think giving any of the right biased panelist's more air time shows bias…
I think it’s more cleverly giving them the rope to hang them selves with, because they constantly show their ideology up…

I wish that was true, but you only have to look to the Brexit vote and the Johnson PM fiasco to see that large swathes the electorate have been duped and cajoled further and further towards the right.
 
I'm not sure its necessarily a move specifically to the right.

I think it is more to do with people wanting instant gratification like when they buy things. They look for simple answers to complex issues.

I'm still convinced that if we had been in Schengen pre 2016 the vote to stay would've easily won. Vote out and you'll have to queue when you get to Spain on holiday would've swung it.

The other thing is that this simplification makes complicated answers a turnoff. Governing a country domestically can't be separated from doing so internationally. Its far easier for someone like Johnson to peddle a soundbite lie when he knows that the rebuttal of why that's just not true is so dry it puts people off.
 
I'm not sure its necessarily a move specifically to the right.

I think it is more to do with people wanting instant gratification like when they buy things. They look for simple answers to complex issues.

I'm still convinced that if we had been in Schengen pre 2016 the vote to stay would've easily won. Vote out and you'll have to queue when you get to Spain on holiday would've swung it.

The other thing is that this simplification makes complicated answers a turnoff. Governing a country domestically can't be separated from doing so internationally. Its far easier for someone like Johnson to peddle a soundbite lie when he knows that the rebuttal of why that's just not true is so dry it puts people off.
Excellent post.
 
I wish that was true, but you only have to look to the Brexit vote and the Johnson PM fiasco to see that large swathes the electorate have been duped and cajoled further and further towards the right.
I’m really not sure how you can blame QT for that, he was an elected MP and already had a platform well before Brexit. If QT doesn’t have “carefully selected” panellists (some of which are MPs) then who should it have? Agree some of the journalists are self-righteous knobheads but they do at least pay attention to politics.

That tackle Johnson did in that SoccerAid match raised his profile with the masses as much as anything before he became mayor. Should they be blamed for choosing him to play?
 
The party in power is naturally there to be shot at. And rightly so. For the opposition when facing challenge the default is to simply say 'we aren't in power so nothing to do with us'. Again, rightly so. The subjects discussed on QT are the fiery hot topics of the day and are generally extremely emotive. Hence, what do people expect? A nice afternoon tea type chit chat? Fingers and toes crossed labour make a better fist of running the country when their time comes but for SKS and his team it could very well be a case of careful what you wish for. QT awaits...
What do I want? The truth. For anyone, politician, journalist, whoever, to be called out for lying. You want a balanced debate based on evidence and facts otherwise what’s the point. At the moment it’s just a group of largely right wing, unprogressive people revelling in the smell of each other’s farts. It serves no purpose other than wilfully spreading misinformation. It should be broadcast with a fact checker on hand IMO. It’d change in an instant.
 
What do I want? The truth. For anyone, politician, journalist, whoever, to be called out for lying. You want a balanced debate based on evidence and facts otherwise what’s the point. At the moment it’s just a group of largely right wing, unprogressive people revelling in the smell of each other’s farts. It serves no purpose other than wilfully spreading misinformation. It should be broadcast with a fact checker on hand IMO. It’d change in an instant.
There’s no such as “the truth” though is there? There’s your truth and there’s their truth. The idea that politics used to be better 15 years ago is laughable, during the latter stages of Blair’s government this board was awash with people saying politics had gone down the pan and what a liar he was etc.

It’s a bit like the ticket prices debate, it just goes round and round for years and years. People think it gets worse but it’s always been this bad.
 
There’s no such as “the truth” though is there? There’s your truth and there’s their truth. The idea that politics used to be better 15 years ago is laughable, during the latter stages of Blair’s government this board was awash with people saying politics had gone down the pan and what a liar he was etc.

It’s a bit like the ticket prices debate, it just goes round and round for years and years. People think it gets worse but it’s always been this bad.
There are facts. This is what political debate should be based on. A politician talking about process, jobs, hospitals, profits, taxes, we have facts and metrics to measure those things.

I never said politics was better 15 years ago. But the standard of debate has deteriorated since the rise of rolling news IMO.
 
There are facts. This is what political debate should be based on. A politician talking about process, jobs, hospitals, profits, taxes, we have facts and metrics to measure those things.

I never said politics was better 15 years ago. But the standard of debate has deteriorated since the rise of rolling news IMO.
Sorry I was also replying to HMB re 15 years ago.

Yes there are facts but it’s like anything, most of them will be heavily bent to suit the narrative, it’s just the world we live in.

QT is one programme, it isn’t solely responsible for the state of British politics at any given time. If it is then the electorate needs to open its mind to other sources than 60 minutes late on a Thursday night on BBC1.
 
There’s no such as “the truth” though is there? There’s your truth and there’s their truth. The idea that politics used to be better 15 years ago is laughable, during the latter stages of Blair’s government this board was awash with people saying politics had gone down the pan and what a liar he was etc.

It’s a bit like the ticket prices debate, it just goes round and round for years and years. People think it gets worse but it’s always been this bad.
You seriously think politics hasn't degenerated over the past 15 years? 😳

UK politics is a a swamp, with the country being run like a banana republic - the worst (in my lifetime) it has ever been. Lies, scandals, cover ups, corruption have become the norm. People are becoming immune to it - which for a fair, functioning democracy is wrong.

You can blame the 2008 global economy crash for the seeds of a lot of issues, but as time has progressed the level of disdain our government treats it's people is off the scale.
 
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