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Broadcaster blasted for attempting to ‘eradicate biological sex norms’ by disciplining newsreader amid ‘pregnant people’ row

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The BBC has been scolded for trying to “eradicate biological sex norms” by disciplining veteran newsreader Martine Croxall amid their “pregnant people” row.

Speaking to GB News, Assistant Editor at The Spectator Madeline Grant said the BBC was making a “very extreme proposition” with their use of “pregnant people” rather than “pregnant women”.


The BBC is facing yet another backlash after retracting support for newsreader Martine Croxall, who corrected “pregnant people” to “women” during a broadcast in June.

The BBC’s Executive Complaints Unit determined that her actions, combined with her facial expression during the broadcast, breached the corporation’s impartiality standards by creating the impression she was expressing a personal stance on a contentious issue.

Madeleine Grant, Tim Davie

Madeleine Grant has hit out at the BBC for trying to ‘eradicate biological sex norms’ by disciplining their newsreader amid ‘pregnant people’ row

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GB NEWS / PA

Delivering her verdict on the broadcaster’s decision, Ms Grant told GB News: “It’s increasingly difficult to trust the BBC. There are still fantastic journalists who are working hard and adhering to that old impartiality that those of us who’ve been watching TV for decades will remember and recognise, but I think those people are increasingly in a minority.

“And it must be deeply annoying for them when they’re trying hard to uphold those old principles and potentially some of that kind of Raytheon programming that it was established to do.”

She added: “When they see something like, for example, the Martine Croxall furore, it seems like quite a small thing, but I actually think it tells you so much about what the thinking that’s going on at the BBC.

“Pregnant people is not neutral language. It’s a very extreme proposition that’s basically asking to eradicate biological sex norms that we’ve had in human history, and in refusing to say that she was basically striking out in the direction of truth, the fact that she was disciplined for that tells me everything.”

Broadcasting HouseThe BBC’s Executive Complaints Unit has upheld 20 viewer complaints against veteran news presenter Martine Croxall | PA

Criticising the BBC for being “asleep at the wheel” on the biggest news stories, Ms Grant said: “I kind of worry that the BBC now is approaching a kind of irrelevance, if you’ve got people who are so politically motivated that they’re are not going after important stories, which is what this memo reveals.

“They have been asleep at the wheel on many important stories. Where was the BBC during the Tavistock Clinic, for example?

“It means that they are missing the big stories which are increasingly being broken elsewhere, like grooming gangs, GB News, The Times, The Telegraph. They are breaking far more big stories now than the state broadcaster.”

Asked by host Matt Goodwin what her “advice” would be to BBC Director General Tim Davie, Ms Grant declared that “heads will need to roll” over the incident.

Madeleine Grant

Ms Grant told GB News

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GB NEWS

She told GB News: “I would not have a kind of team of LGBT reporters, which is what seems to have happened here, that when there is reporting in any particular area, they go to this pool of kind of experts.

“I worry that when you set it up in that way, there will be a group of people who perhaps have their own motivations and are not representing the impartial ideal. So I would kind of end that.”

Ms Grant concluded: “Honestly, heads need to roll. It can’t operate like the civil service does, where people screw up and they just move to another department and potentially maybe hire fewer people.

“Make them better, I mean, it’s increasingly very difficult to trust the BBC.”

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