Trump WILL sue the BBC! US President says he will seek ‘anywhere from $1-5billion’ as soon as next week as he attacks ‘egregious’ Panorama edit

Trump WILL sue the BBC! US President says he will seek ‘anywhere from $1-5billion’ as soon as next week as he attacks ‘egregious’ Panorama edit

Donald Trump said he will sue the BBC as he blasted the broadcaster for its editing of a speech he made in 2021 on the day his supporters overran the Capitol.

The British Broadcasting Corporation sent a personal apology to the US President on Thursday but said there was no legal basis for him to sue the public broadcaster over a documentary his lawyers called defamatory.

After the BBC refused the total capitulation demanded by the US President, Trump told GB News that he had an ‘obligation’ to take legal action in a fiery interview.

‘I’m not looking to get into lawsuits, but I think I have an obligation to do it. This was so egregious’, he told GB News’ Bev Turner.

‘If you don’t do it, you don’t stop it from happening again with other people’.

Trump also confirmed to journalists outside the White House on Friday that he planned to formally seek damages, saying: ‘We’ll sue them from anywhere between $1 billion and $5 billion, probably sometime next week.

‘I think I have to do it,’ he added.

The President had thrown down the gauntlet to the broadcaster with a deadline of 10pm on Friday.

Donald Trump said he will sue the BBC as he blasted the broadcaster with a fiery rebuke to its apology last night

In a scathing letter, the President's lawyers demanded by Friday night a full retraction, immediate apology and an offer of compensation from the BBC over the 'fabricated depiction' of Donald Trump on Panorama

In a scathing letter, the President’s lawyers demanded by Friday night a full retraction, immediate apology and an offer of compensation from the BBC over the ‘fabricated depiction’ of Donald Trump on Panorama

He had vowed to sue unless he got a full retraction, grovelling apology and offer of compensation for misleading Panorama viewers with an edit of his speech before the January 6 Capitol riot.

The BBC apologised but said it refused to pay financial compensation.

The corporation said the splicing of the speech was an ‘error of judgment’ but rejected his compensation demands.

Chairman Samir Shah has sent a personal letter to the White House to apologise for the editing, and lawyers for the corporation have written to the president’s legal team, a BBC spokesperson said.

The spokesperson added: ‘While the BBC sincerely regrets the manner in which the video clip was edited, we strongly disagree there is a basis for a defamation claim.’

Trump’s remarks on the BBC on Friday came as he told GB News that London Mayor Sadiq Khan a ‘terrible, terrible mayor’.

He went on to say that Mr Khan ‘is a disaster’ and ‘a nasty person’, before making unsubstantiated claims that the British capital has areas where ‘the police won’t go’ and where Sharia Law is being exercised.

Mr Trump’s explosive interview with GB News comes after the BBC defiantly refused to concede Mr Trump had a legal right to damages. Insiders said they were expecting a fierce rection from the President.

Director-general Tim Davie quit the BBC on Sunday after five years in the corporation's top job

Director-general Tim Davie quit the BBC on Sunday after five years in the corporation’s top job

In a letter to BBC staff yesterday, seen by the Daily Mail, chairman Samir Shah acknowledged what ‘I fully understand has been a difficult week’, adding: ‘I’m aware there is sadness, anger and frustration in relation to what has happened in recent days and it is hard when the BBC is the focus of so much attention and news headlines.’

He said he had written to President Trump ‘personally to extend my apology’ but that ‘while the BBC sincerely regrets the manner in which the video clip was edited, we strongly disagree there is a basis for a defamation claim’. Mr Shah thanked staff for their resilience in what ‘I fully appreciate have been challenging circumstances’.

The BBC had admitted ‘that our edit unintentionally created the impression that we were showing a single continuous section of the speech, rather than excerpts from different points in the speech, and that this gave the mistaken impression that President Trump had made a direct call for violent action.’

Amid catastrophic consequences for the corporation, Director General Tim Davie and Deborah Turness, the head of BBC News, both fell on their swords on Sunday.

Earlier this week, Mr Trump remarked: ‘I guess I have to [sue]. Why not? They defrauded the public and they’ve admitted it. This is within one of our great allies, supposedly our great ally. That’s a pretty sad event. They actually changed my January 6 speech, which was a beautiful speech, which was a very calming speech, and they made it sound radical.’

He also told Fox News on Tuesday: ‘I think I have an obligation to [sue] because you can’t allow people to do that.’

Mr Trump said he would be ‘left with no alternative but to enforce his legal and equitable rights… including by filing legal action for no less than 1,000,000,000 dollars [£760million] in damages,’ if the BBC failed to act.

When asked about Mr Trump’s legal threats, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters the corporation is a ‘Leftist propaganda machine’.

BBC chairman Samir Shah (above) admitted to an 'error of judgment' over the editing but rejected claims of systemic bias and stopped short of issuing a direct apology to Mr Trump

BBC chairman Samir Shah (above) admitted to an ‘error of judgment’ over the editing but rejected claims of systemic bias and stopped short of issuing a direct apology to Mr Trump

As licence fee payers faced the prospect of a costly legal battle, the BBC’s legal team sent Mr Trump a letter setting out five reasons why it does not think it has a case to answer.

It said the documentary was restricted to viewers in the UK, did not cause Mr Trump any harm – as he was re-elected shortly after – and ‘was not designed to mislead, but just to shorten a long speech’.

Fourthly, it said the clip was 12 seconds within an hour-long programme, which also contained voices in support of Trump, and finally , an opinion on a matter of public concern and political speech is heavily protected under defamation laws in the US.

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme the corporation’s editorial standards and guidelines were ‘in some cases not robust enough and in other cases not consistently applied’.

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