How on earth do you arrive at such a preposterous view of the BBC. There has only ever been one head of the BBC who wasn't known to be a Tory. Most of the staff, when they leave for other jobs, turn out to be Tories or worse. The nonsense view that the BBC is "liberal left", is put out by the overwhelmingly Tory press in the UK to allow the Tory government to push it even further to the right. I find it hard to believe you are actually in the UK rather than somewhere politically absurd like Texas.
Most academic research shows the BBC to be liberal. If you want to understand what a right wing news station is, have a look at Fox News.
I don't consider liberal to be truly left. Liberals are the highly educated intellectual elite, typically from a privileged middle class background. Proper left wing is socialist, or at least social democracy (the latter I would like to see more of in the UK). Liberals are the privileged elite, they are not working class socialists.
I live in London, and am fully aware of the Islington liberal set, who dominate the BBC. BBC values reflect Islington values. The BBC do not properly represent the nation because of their London-centric geography, and they do not properly represent the working classes, because liberals don't care that much about the working man and women, nor do they understand the working classes. Liberals have their own intellectual university-educated interests which differ markedly from the interests of the working class.
Not only do liberals have inordinate influence at the BBC, but liberals have totally infiltrated and taken over the Labour party. This occurred during the Tony Blair era. Labour used to be socialist, but now Labour is mostly liberal. Labour are now more interested in political correctness issues and feminism, gay and transgender rights than the plight of the working classes. So Labour no longer represent the working classes, in the way they used to 30 years ago when they were a socialist party.
Indeed, liberal-infiltrated Labour are so out of touch with the working classes, that these working classes have abandoned Labour in droves, voting instead for right-wing populist parties, who they feel better represent their needs. This exodus from Labour to the right-wing populism is a direct result of Labour abandoning its socialist roots. And this has not just happened in the UK, but all over Europe, where left wing parties have become less socialist and more liberal.
If you want to understand how right-wing populism has arisen in Europe, look no further than the liberals, who infiltrated and took over the socialist parties of Europe, making these parties much less relevant to the working classes.
Edited by Hip, 19 April 2021 - 05:33 PM.