Express.co.uk readers have shared their views over whether Gary Lineker should remain at the BBC after his comments on the Government’s immigration policy. The presenter compared Suella Braverman’s new migrant bill to a policy of Nazi Germany, igniting a row over his
Gary Lineker’s BBC career appears to be on a knife-edge following his Twitter comments comparing the Government’s Illegal Migration Bill to 1930s Germany. Now, even his usual supporters on the left are saying he crossed a line. Last night, Labour Shadow Cabinet
Tory MPs have called for the BBC to sack Gary Lineker after he compared the Government’s new migration policy to the tactics of Nazi Germany. But do you think the Match of the Day host should be sacked? Vote in our poll.
Suella Braverman today condemned Gary Lineker’s controversial comparison of the Government’s migrant crackdown to Nazi Germany. The Match of the Day host has sparked fury from Tory MPs and calls for the BBC to sack him after taking to Twitter to hit
King Charles will not be giving an interview to the BBC ahead of his Coronation in May, according to royal sources. Royal commentator and author Stewart Pearce said that the monarch was keen to talk to the broadcaster to publicise his “manifesto”
Twitter user Jo Ward joked: “We’d prefer Eurovision…” A fellow Twitter user, whose account goes under the name Marcus Tullius Cicero, commented: “[S]till won’t be watching that tripe.” A fifth user of the platform, Dave, chimed in: “Wow. Our saviours.” Meanwhile, campaigners
The Coronation of King Charles will take place on May 6.
The BBC denies handing Islamic State bride Shamima Begum an “unchallenged platform”. It comes after a leading strategist branded broadcasters “useful idiots” for giving her airtime. A court judgment last week saw Begum’s bid to restore her British citizenship fail. During the
BBC staff could time upcoming strikes to interfere with King Charles III’s Coronation. A ballot organised by the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) could see 1,000 journalists withdraw their labour on March 15 and May 6. If they vote to take action
Raids by Indian tax authorities on the BBC’s Delhi and Mumbai offices are a “blatant attack on press freedoms”, a British MP has claimed, as critics continue to suggest the motives behind the searches were disingenuous. Jim Shannon MP accused Indian Prime