Difference between revisions of "Maggie's Militant Tendency"
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
+ | [[Category:BBC]] |
Latest revision as of 18:48, 4 May 2010
Maggie's Militant Tendency was an episode of the BBC current affairs programme Panorama, which was broadcast on 30 January 1984. [1] The programme, which was based on an official investigation by the Conservative Party, detailed infiltration of the Tory party by right-wing extremists and provoked a furious reaction from the Tory right-wing.
The chairman of the Institute of Economic Affairs, Ralph Harris, raised around £100,000 for the right-wing Conservative MP Neil Hamilton to bring a libel action against the BBC. Lord Harris said: 'I remember at the time Neil came to me and raised the question of financing the libel action. I managed to raise around £100,000, enabling Neil at the time to go after the BBC.' [2] A major donor to the fund was the right-wing financier Sir James Goldsmith. [3] The case came to the High Court in October 1986 and the BBC subsequently settled. [4] According to the BBC Director-General Alasdair Milne the BBC settled because he was instructed to by the Governors, costing the BBC £50,000 in damages and £250,000 in costs. [5] This was followed by a Commons motion signed by 100 Tory MPs calling on the DG to resign. [6]
Notes
- ↑ BFI Film & TV Database, Maggie's Militant Tendency
- ↑ quoted in Kim Sengupta, 'The Hamilton Affair: The cost - Right-wing donors united by their loathing of Fayed', Independent, 22 December 1999
- ↑ Patricia Wynn Davies, 'The Cash-for-Questions Affair: The miners' grandson who found a niche in the right', Independent, 21 October 1994; p.3
- ↑ Tom O'Malley, Closedown? (Pluto Press, 1994), p.61
- ↑ Knives are out for the BBC bosses, Independent, 9 January 2006
- ↑ Tom O'Malley, Closedown? (Pluto Press, 1994), p.61