'BBC licence fee to be scrapped by 2027' as Labour plans to replace it with 'new tax'

By GB News (Politics) | Created at 2025-01-12 12:27:09 | Updated at 2025-01-12 15:13:12 2 hours ago
Truth

The BBC licence fee is under consideration to be scrapped as Labour officials have planned to replace it with a general tax.

Culture secretary Lisa Nandy is toying with the idea of abolishing the fee in December 2027, opting for a system where the Government collects taxes to bankroll TV programmes instead.


New plans are said to include turning the corporation into a mutual organisation owned by the public.

The potential plans have followed Nandy’s previous commitment to hold an “honest national conversation about the broadcaster’s long-term future”.

Lisa Nandy

Culture secretary Lisa Nandy is toying with the idea of abolishing the fee in December 2027

PA

The proposal of the corporation’s renewal comes as the BBC faces a number of challenges, stretching from plummeting income for the license fee as younger audiences opt for social media platforms, including YouTube and TikTok.

Additionally, scandals involving their presenters, such as Huw Edwards, have damaged the BBC’s reputation in recent years.

Reports last night have suggested that Nandy had briefed the PM on her draft plans, while Starmer is eager to solve the long-lasting issue regarding how to pay for BBC shows.

The Whitehall source added: “People have been saying for more than a decade now that the licence fee is an anachronism. But then they keep going back to it.

BBC stock image

The proposal of the corporation’s renewal comes as the BBC faces a number of challenges

PA

“Keir is prepared to think more radically.”

Labour’s review of the corporation’s charter will launch this year, with Nandy and BBC’s director general already kickstarting “embryonic talks” at the end of 2024.

Previously, a BBC spokesman said: “We want everyone to get value from the licence fee and we are committed to delivering trusted news, the best homegrown storytelling and those special moments that bring us together.”

It has gone further and promised to run its “biggest-ever public engagement exercise” in 2025 to gain more information on how to approach its future.

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