BBC Newsnight journalist sent 41 tweets critiquing the Tories, while only three were directed at Labour – a new bias row breaks out

  • The Campaign For Common Sense advocates ‘free speech, tolerance’ 
  • They analysed tweets of BBC journalists, including Lewis Goodall who is the Policy Editor at Newsnight.
  • They had viewed 236 tweets from Goodall’s in the first week of Oct.
  • It stated that 41 were critical about the Conservatives, and only three were critical of Labour. 










The group claimed that it had analyzed 236 tweets from Mr Goodall during the first week in October. 

A new ‘bias’ row broke out last night over claims that some of the BBC’s top journalists are twice as likely to write or share Twitter posts critical of the Government than any other single subject.

The claims come as the BBC starts the process of selecting a successor to political editor Laura Kuenssberg, who is in talks about moving to Radio 4’s Today programme.

The Campaign For Common Sense, which champions ‘free speech and tolerance’, claims that its analysis of one week of posts by some of the BBC’s biggest names ‘reveals a fascination with the issues of identity politics, a lingering mistrust of Brexit and an anti-Government bias’.

One of the journalists studied was Newsnight’s policy editor Lewis Goodall, who is seen as a contender for Ms Kuenssberg’s job.

The Campaign For Common Sense, which champions ¿free speech and tolerance¿, claims that its analysis of one week of posts, including that of Lewis Goodall's, who is seen as a contender for Political Editor Laura Kuenssberg's job

The Campaign For Common Sense, which champions ‘free speech and tolerance’, claims that its analysis of one week of posts, including that of Lewis Goodall’s, who is seen as a contender for Political Editor Laura Kuenssberg’s job

The group claimed that it had analyzed 236 tweets from Mr Goodall during the first week in October.

It stated that 41 people were critical of Conservatives, while 21 others highlighted internal divisions within the party. Only three people were critical of Labour.

In a tweet on October 4 about the shortage of HGV drivers, Mr Goodall said that ‘naturally withdrawing from the single market during global Covid dislocation is undoubtedly making UK supply problems worse’.

Lewis Goodall is the Policy Editor at BBC's Newsnight. His tweets were studied and outlined as one of the BBC's names that revealed 'a fascination with the issues of identity politics, a lingering mistrust of Brexit and an anti-Government bias¿

Lewis Goodall is the Policy editor at BBC Newsnight. His tweets were studied and outlined as one of the BBC’s names that revealed ‘a fascination with the issues of identity politics, a lingering mistrust of Brexit and an anti-Government bias’

Laura Kuenssberg, the BBC's political editor, is in talks about moving to Radio 4¿s Today programme, and Goodall is one of the contenders to take over her position

Laura Kuenssberg, the BBC’s political editor, is in talks about moving to Radio 4’s Today programme, and Goodall is one of the contenders to take over her position

A quote the next day highlighted a Newsnight package that asked: ‘Is levelling up anything more than a slogan?’

On the same day, Mr Goodall tweeted about the Prime Minister’s attack on ‘trendy Islington lawyers’ leading Labour, adding: ‘Of course, Boris Johnson lived in Islington while he was London Mayor.’

In the same week, the BBC’s new executive news editor Jess Brammar – whose appointment caused controversy after it was revealed she had tried to delete 16,000 tweets that included anti-Brexit and anti-Government comments – celebrated an author who wrote about the ‘effects of colonialism’ and shared conspiracy stories about Trump supporters.

The campaign group also said it detected a ‘fully fledged woke agenda’ after studying the BBC’s output for a month.

A BBC spokesman said: 'The BBC is always happy to debate whether it is getting things right, but cherry-picking a handful of tweets and news items from a short period of time isn¿t a robust analysis.¿

A BBC spokesman said: ‘The BBC is always happy to debate whether it is getting things right, but cherry-picking a handful of tweets and news items from a short period of time isn’t a robust analysis.’

The corporation’s editorial guidelines state: ‘Our audiences should not be able to tell from BBC output the personal opinions of our journalists or news and current affairs presenters on matters of public policy, political or industrial controversy, or on “controversial subjects” in any other area.’

A BBC spokesman said: ‘The BBC is always happy to debate whether it is getting things right, but cherry-picking a handful of tweets and news items from a short period of time isn’t a robust analysis.’

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