Monday, 10 November 2025

so BBC is "corrupt" what about TRUMP?

Trump issues pardons for Rudy Giuliani, Sydney Powell and others involved in 2020 fake elector scheme

Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s disbarred and disgraced former attorney, joins other Trumpworld loyalists in receiving an unconditional pardon

John Bowden
in Washington, D.C.
Monday 10 November 2025 08:41 GMT
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Related: ‘Insane’ plan for fake Trump electors to hide in Michigan Capitol overnight revealed at Jan 6 hearings

The White House announced late Sunday evening that Donald Trump had issued pardons for members of his 2020 campaign legal team, including Rudy Giuliani, Kenneth Chesebro and Sydney Powell, for their involvement in a scheme to alter the slates of electors chosen by states that voted against the Republican nominee in that year’s presidential election.

A statement announcing a list of 77 people who were pardoned was tweeted out late Sunday evening, at 10:54 p.m. local time, by Trump’s “clemency czar” Ed Martin.

It included several Americans who participated directly as members of the slates of false electors whose purpose was to supplant duly elected state electors bound to cast their states’ votes in the Electoral College for Joe Biden, after the Democrat won states including Georgia, Arizona, and Michigan in the general election.

That plot, supported at the highest levels by Trump and his allies, eventually led to the attempt by the president’s supporters to halt the certification of the 2020 election on January 6, 2021 — a political demonstration that devolved into a rioting mob attacking the U.S. Capitol and besieging it for several hours.

Sunday’s announcement noted that the pardons were also extended to members of Trump’s administration and campaign uncovered in the January 6 investigations as having facilitated direct conversations between MAGAworld and a combination of conservative activists and sympathetic conservative state lawmakers who supported the president’s efforts, including his former chief of staff, Mark Meadows.

A line near the end of the statement also pointedly indicated that one individual was not pardoned in connection with the scheme: Donald J. Trump.

Donald Trump declined to pardon himself as he issued clemency for Rudy Giuliani and others involved in his ill-fated 2020 legal efforts to challenge the election results
Donald Trump declined to pardon himself as he issued clemency for Rudy Giuliani and others involved in his ill-fated 2020 legal efforts to challenge the election results (Reuters)

The timing of the announcement seemed as if it was meant to be buried in the news cycle around the government shutdown. Just minutes earlier, the last vote was cast in the Senate to break a filibuster on a resolution to end a 40-day government shutdown by Sen. John Cornyn, who arrived late.

The resolution now heads to the House of Representatives, and potentially to the president’s desk for a signature that would end the longest funding lapse in history.

Aside from directing the “fake elector” scheme, members of the 2020 Trump legal team named in the document participated in another, more orthodox method of challenging the 2020 election results. In multiple lawsuits led by Giuliani, Jenna Ellis and others on the campaign legal team, Trumpworld argued that widespread voter fraud had taken place in numerous states and had changed the results of the election in Biden’s favor.

The campaign was never able to provide definitive proof to any judge who took the cases, instead relying on signed affidavits from the president’s supporters, who alleged they had witnessed nefarious activity. Trump campaign sources never proved that the vote totals in any of the states they targeted had been manipulated, nor were they able to come up with measurable numbers of names of voters who had participated in the election unlawfully through fraudulent means.

Rudi Giuliani was the public face of the Trump campaign’s legal team in 2020
Rudi Giuliani was the public face of the Trump campaign’s legal team in 2020 (AP)

Campaign sources were separately unable to prove that Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic, two companies that supplied digital elections infrastructure to states during the 2020 election, had used systems that were manipulated or corrupted in any way. Those companies ended up launching massive legal bids against conservative news networks that uncritically spread the Trump campaign’s claims, such as Fox News. In Fox’s case, Dominion Voting Systems was awarded a staggering $787m settlement.

The subsequent investigation by the January 6 committee and the discovery portion of Dominion’s lawsuit revealed that prominent Fox hosts had privately dismissed the Trump campaign’s fraud claims as bogus while treating them as factual — or, at a minimum, believable — on their respective programs.

Giuliani, who was the public face of the Trump campaign’s legal team in 2020, fell into personal and professional disgrace over his actions. Appearing sloppy, confused, and downright inept at times as he presented the president’s case, the former New York City mayor, known as “America’s Mayor” after he stewarded the city through the 9/11 terror attacks, found himself disbarred in Washington, D.C. and New York after it was all said and done.

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Why is the BBC expected to apologise over a Donald Trump speech edit?


Why is the BBC expected to apologise over a Donald Trump speech edit?

Why is the BBC expected to apologise over a Donald Trump speech edit?

Boris Johnson and White House criticise the corporation, but some journalists say criticism is part of campaign to destroy the BBC

Jamie GriersonSun 9 Nov 2025 14.07 GMTShare

The BBC is expected to apologise on Monday for the way in which a speech by the US president, Donald Trump, was edited in an episode of Panorama. The show is one of a number of examples highlighted by Michael Prescott, a former external adviser to the BBC’s editorial standards committee, who detailed his concerns about the broadcaster’s impartiality in a memo published by the Telegraph.


What happened?

Details of a “dossier” compiled by Prescott were published in the Telegraph over the course of last week. The main criticism of Prescott’s memo focused on an edition of Panorama, broadcast a week before the US election. He accused the BBC of selectively editing a Trump speech.

Prescott also raised concerns about BBC Arabic. He claimed that a review by the BBC journalist David Grossman had highlighted “systemic problems within BBC Arabic” that represented anti-Israel bias.

The 19-page dossier is also reported to have criticised the BBC’s coverage of transgender issues, saying the broadcaster had been “captured by a small group of [staff] promoting the Stonewall view” of gender identity issues, and that its LGBT desk would “decline to cover any stories raising difficult questions”.


Who is Michael Prescott?

Prescott is a former journalist who went on to become a corporate adviser. His roles included 10 years as chief political correspondent and then political editor of the Sunday Times, and eight years as corporate affairs director for BT.

He holds a role at Hanover Communications and used to be an adviser to the BBC committee overseeing editorial guidelines and standards.

Sources have told the Guardian that Robbie Gibb – who served as director of communications to Theresa May in Downing Street between 2017 and 2019 – was instrumental in the appointment of Prescott as an adviser to the BBC’s editorial guidelines and standards committee. The pair are reported to be friends. Concerns have previously been raised about the role of Gibb, who joined the BBC board when Boris Johnson was in Downing Street.


What happened with the Trump edit?

Prescott’s concerns regard clips edited together from sections of the US president’s speech on 6 January 2021 for the documentary Trump: A Second Chance? which was broadcast by the BBC the week before last year’s US election.

The edited clip suggested that Trump told the crowd: “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol and I’ll be there with you, and we fight. We fight like hell.” But the words were taken from sections of his speech almost an hour apart. It did not include a section in which Trump said he wanted supporters “to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard”.


What has the reaction been?

Prescott’s memo has led to criticism of the BBC from senior Conservatives. Boris Johnson told the Telegraph that the corporation’s director general, Tim Davie, “must either explain or resign”. He said the BBC had been “caught red-handed in multiple acts of leftwing bias”.

The Tory party leader, Kemi Badenoch, said “heads should roll”. Johnson posted on social media last week: “Is anyone at the BBC going to take responsibility – and resign?”

Trump’s press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, described the BBC as “100% fake news” and a “propaganda machine” after the allegations emerged.

Others have put the row down to the rightwing press’s ideological obsession with undermining the BBC.

The BBC presenter Nick Robinson said on the Today programme there was a “genuine” concern regarding the broadcaster’s editorial standards and mistakes, however he said he believed there was a “political campaign by people who want to destroy the organisation”.

The veteran broadcaster John Simpson said Robinson was “exactly right”.

The British journalist Adam Boulton, a former political editor of Sky News, said on X that he thought claims of bias on this occasion were “BS [bullshit]”, adding it was “fake news to suggest ⁦Donald Trump⁩ did not egg on what happened on 6 January”.

On Sunday evening Tim Davie, the BBC director general, announced his resignation, along with the head of BBC News, Deborah Turness.

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