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United KingdomCulture4 days ago

BBC axes hundreds of news and TV jobs in £500m savings drive

BBC director-general Matt Brittin has announced plans to cut up to 550 jobs across BBC News and TV and radio-related roles as part of a broader initiative to achieve £500 million in savings over two years. The cuts include reductions in programming and content spending by £80 million, along with a review of broadcast TV channels and radio networks due to shifting audience habits toward digital platforms. The BBC has not specified which programs will be affected, and additional job cuts affecting 700 corporate roles are expected.

BBC director-general Matt Brittin has announced that 550 of the planned 1,800 to 2,000 job cuts at the corporation will be taken from BBC News and TV and radio-related roles.

The 57-year-old has also announced the BBC is to axe programmes and cut content spending by £80 million, and added it would “review our broadcast TV channels and radio network portfolio” as more of its audience moves online, while attempting to sustain “output” and “audience value and impact”.

The BBC has not indicated which programmes would be axed under the plans.

Job cuts will also impact around 700 corporate roles, as the BBC attempts to make £500 million in savings over two years, with job cuts announced in April set to take place over the next three years.

The director-general said in an email to staff it is hoped cuts and savings in BBC News and further TV and radio areas will make £160 million in cost savings.

The BBC has also said it expects to cut programmes (James Manning/PA) (PA Archive)

Mr Brittin told staff in the email: “The scale of savings requires tough choices, careful work and won’t all be ready at once. We are committed to letting you know as soon as we have plans in your area. All divisions will be making significant savings…

“We live in very uncertain times. Our audiences rely on us every day to keep them informed, entertained and equipped to make sense of the world.

“Making savings while fulfilling our mission means a doubly difficult time for everyone. Do speak to your leaders and use the support that’s available. In the meantime, thank-you for all you are doing.”

He added that the BBC would be reducing senior leaders by “at least” 10% to make it “simpler and faster”.

The former Google executive said further details on cuts and savings would be announced “in the months ahead”.

In response to the announcement, head of media and entertainment union, Bectu, Philippa Childs, said it is “far from ideal” that the cuts are taking place at the same time as the BBC’s charter renewal.

She said: “I’m not sure how you can make informed decisions about the long-term future of the organisation when it will be in a substantially diminished place at the end of the process than the beginning.

“In an era of fake news and an industry that is becoming more concentrated in the hands of a few multinational corporations, the UK needs a confident, ambitious and sustainably-funded BBC more than ever.

“The charter renewal must put the BBC’s funding on a secure, long-term pathway or it risks death by a thousand cuts.”

She said that while cuts were “expected”, they would “still be devastating for the workforce and to the BBC as a whole”.

Childs added: “Ten per cent cuts when real terms income from the licence fee is already down £1.3 billion in the last decade is significant and will affect the BBC’s ability to deliver its public service mission.

“It seems clear that cuts will have a direct impact on programming and output, and audiences will also notice the effects.

“Bectu is actively engaging with the BBC to mitigate the impact as much as possible, and we will support members facing redundancy as well as those who will see their workloads drastically change.”

Brittin will host an all-staff call next Tuesday at 2pm to take questions.

The director-general took up the role in May, replacing Tim Davie who announced his resignation in November 2025 after editorial coverage led to a 10 billion dollar (£7.5 billion) lawsuit from US president Donald Trump over the editing of a Panorama documentary.

Read the full article at The Independent
Source document: Financial Times

3 reports

The IndependentIndependentCenter4 days ago
BBC axes hundreds of news and TV jobs in £500m savings drive

BBC director-general Matt Brittin has announced plans to cut up to 550 jobs across BBC News and TV and radio-related roles as part of a broader initiative to achieve £500 million in savings over two years. The cuts include reductions in programming and content spending by £80 million, along with a review of broadcast TV channels and radio networks due to shifting audience habits toward digital platforms. The BBC has not specified which programs will be affected, and additional job cuts affecting 700 corporate roles are expected.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about job cuts and budgetary decisions at the BBC without overtly favoring any political perspective. It does not employ loaded language, one-sided sourcing, or omissions that suggest a particular ideological stance. The focus is on organizational changes and

Sky News (UK)IndependentCenter4 days ago
The TV and radio programmes being axed by BBC

The BBC is cutting approximately 550 jobs and reviewing its broadcast TV and radio programs, including the roles of its chief news presenters, as part of a larger restructuring effort.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about job cuts and program reviews at the BBC without using biased language or emphasizing any particular political perspective. It does not frame the changes as positive or negative but simply reports on the restructuring.

ReutersIndependentCenter6 days ago
BBC to cut hundreds of jobs in Britain in news division downsize, FT reports

The BBC is reportedly cutting hundreds of jobs in its news division as part of a downsizing effort, according to a report by the Financial Times.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual report without overtly biased language or framing. It does not take a stance on the decision itself, merely relays the information from the Financial Times.

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