The National Union of Journalists The voice of journalists at work
Newsroom
Tuesday, 23 March 2010 Print  |  Send

'Save BBC' campaign gets parliamentary and video support

The campaign to save the BBC from £600 million in management-imposed cuts moved to parliament, with a meeting at Portcullis House in Westminster on Monday, March 22.

There's also an early day motion signed by nearly 90 MPs. And, of course, more than 166,000  people  have signed petitions calling on the BBC Trust to do its job and defend public service broadcasting, rather than cave in to the schemes of corporate media giants to dismantle the BBC. The numbers are growing every day. 

 Support for the campaign against BBC cuts was reflected in a video shot at the Asian Music Awards.

The National Union of Journalists has condemned BBC plans to implement the  £600m cuts package at the BBC as a desperate pre-election sacrifice. NUJ general secretary Jeremy Dear said: "Public pressure can help persuade the BBC to put its viewers and listeners first, and I hope NUJ members will sign the petition calling on the BBC Trust to defend BBC output.

“BBC management is on a collision course - not just with us and the hundreds of BBC staff who face losing  their jobs, but with licence fee payers up and down the country.

 "BBC management's strategy of desperate, hopeful self-sacrifice is fundamentally flawed. Far from convincing an incoming government or commercial rivals that the BBC should now be left well alone, their self-harming approach will only encourage commercial media operations to demand more cuts. We cannot stand by and watch staff and outstanding public service content sacrificed to satisfy the demands of Rupert Murdoch and other commercial  interests.

"Public outrage at the proposed cuts has been overwhelming. A 'Save BBC6 Music' Facebook group has gained almost 90,000 members in just a few days and we've seen an increase in requests for union membership from BBC staff right across the UK."




Google Sitemap Generator