The BBCâs director general resigned on Sunday following a row over the editing of a documentary about Donald Trump, as the US president attacked âcorrupt journalistsâ.
Tim Davie and the broadcasterâs head of news, Deborah Turness, resigned after accusations that a documentary by its flagship Panorama programme had edited a speech by Trump in a misleading way.
Reacting to the news, Trump said âcorrupt journalistsâ had been exposed, adding âthese are very dishonest people who tried to step on the scales of a Presidential Electionâ.
Announcing his resignation Davie said in a statement posted on the BBC website: âLike all public organisations, the BBC is not perfect, and we must always be open, transparent and accountable.
âWhile not being the only reason, the current debate around BBC News has understandably contributed to my decision... I have to take ultimate responsibility.â
The latest controversy follows a Daily Telegraph report this week that said concerns were first raised in the summer in a memo on impartiality by Michael Prescott, a former external adviser to the BBCâs editorial standards committee.
Earlier Sunday, the UK Culture, Media and Sport Minister Lisa Nandy called the allegations âincredibly seriousâ.
The BBC has promised âa full responseâ to parliamentâs culture media and sport committee on Monday.
The criticism emerged over clips spliced together from sections of a Trump speech on January 6, 2021, when he was accused of fomenting the mob attack on the US Capitol seeking to keep him in power despite losing his re-election bid.
The edit made it appear he had told supporters he was going to walk to the US Capitol with them and âfight like hellâ.
In the undoctored clip, however, the president urged the audience to walk with him âand weâre going to cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and womenâ.
At the time, Trump was still disputing President Joe Bidenâs election victory, in a vote that saw him ousted after his first term in office.
The edit was included in a documentary entitled âTrump: A Second Chance?â that was broadcast by the BBC the week before last yearâs US election.
Nandy had said earlier Sunday that the Trump edit was one of several concerns about editorial standards at the BBC.
âIt isnât just about the Panorama programme, although that is incredibly serious,â she told BBC television in an interview.
âThere are a series of very serious allegations made, the most serious of which is that there is systemic bias in the way that difficult issues are reported at the BBC,â she said.
Nandy said she was concerned about a tendency for editorial standards and the language used in reports to be âentirely inconsistentâ whether it be on âIsrael, Gaza... trans people or on this issue about President Trumpâ.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt seemed to rejoice over the news, posting on X a screen-shot of the BBC news site announcing the resignation.
Leavitt was previously quoted by the Telegraph condemning âthis purposefully dishonestly, selectively edited clip by the BBCâ.
The BBC is funded by a licence fee paid by anyone who watches live TV in the UK.
Earlier this year, it issued several apologies for âserious flawsâ in the making of another documentary entitled âGaza: How To Survive A Warzoneâ, broadcast in February.
In October it accepted a sanction from the UK media watchdog for what was deemed a âmaterially misleadingâ programme, whose child narrator was later revealed to be the son of Hamasâs former deputy agriculture minister.