Patrick West

The trouble with BBC Verify

(Getty images)

Can the BBC ever be objective and unbiased? It’s a question many of us ask ourselves, sometimes in hope, often in exasperation. It’s also a question that the Corporation forever asks itself, but instead in the spirit of aspiration and ambition. So it’s ostensibly good news that it has announced plans to expand its Verify fact-checking unit. On the face of it, this initiative should result in more accountably and scrutiny in its news output.

Verify was born out of insincerity and dishonesty

BBC director-general Tim Davie has unveiled a scheme, on behalf of ‘the world’s most trusted news provider’, to ‘build Verify across more services globally’. Davie also wants to give it a greater role in local reporting as part of a mission to ‘nurture trust’.

Yet if we are on the topic of truth and accuracy, Davie might have spoken instead of a need to ‘dispel mistrust’. This is because BBC Verify has scarcely had a noble track record as a repository of untainted verities.

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