U.S. President Donald Trump walks off Air Force Ones as he arrives at Palm Beach International Airport on Nov. 07, 2025 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Credit: Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images/AFP)
A U.K. government minister on Sunday described as "incredibly serious" allegations over the way the BBC edited clips of U.S. President Donald Trump in a flagship documentary program.
The comments by Culture, Media and Sport Minister Lisa Nandy came as the broadcaster said its chair, Samir Shah, would provide an explanation to a parliamentary committee on Monday.
Media outlets, including the BBC, reported Sunday that the response was expected to include an apology.
The concerns regard clips spliced together from sections of the U.S. president’s speech on Jan.6, 2021, that made it appear he told supporters he was going to walk to the U.S. Capitol with them and "fight like hell."
In the undoctored clip, however, the president urged the audience to walk with him "and we're going to cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women."
At the time, Trump was still disputing President Joe Biden's election victory, in the vote which saw him ousted after his first term in office.
"The BBC chairman will provide a full response to the Culture, Media and Sport Committee on Monday," a BBC spokesperson said.
The edit was included in a documentary entitled "Trump: A Second Chance?" which was broadcast by the BBC the week before last year's U.S. election.
'Bias' allegation
Nandy said the Trump edit was one of a number of concerns about editorial standards at the BBC.
"It isn't just about the Panorama program, although that is incredibly serious; there are a series of very serious allegations made, the most serious of which is that there is systemic bias in the way that difficult issues are reported at the BBC," she told BBC television in an interview.
Nandy added that she was concerned about a tendency for editorial standards and the language used in reports to be "entirely inconsistent" whether it be on "Israel, Gaza ... trans people or on this issue about President Trump."
The license fee-funded broadcaster earlier this year issued several apologies for "serious flaws" in the making of another documentary, "Gaza: How To Survive A Warzone," broadcast in February.
In October, it accepted a sanction from the U.K. media watchdog for the "materially misleading" program whose child narrator was later revealed to be the son of Hamas's former deputy minister of agriculture.
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