BBC ‘determined to fight’ Trump’s defamation claim

Published November 18, 2025
A television crew report from outside the entrance to the offices of British broadcaster BBC in London on November 11, 2025. — AFP
A television crew report from outside the entrance to the offices of British broadcaster BBC in London on November 11, 2025. — AFP

LONDON: The British Broadcasting Corporation is determined to fight any legal action filed by US President Donald Trump and sees no basis for a defamation case over its editing of one of his speeches, its chair said on Monday.

Trump said last week he was likely to sue the broadcaster for up to $5 billion after it spliced together separate excerpts of a speech on Jan 6, 2021, when his supporters stormed the Capitol. The edit created the impression he had called for violence.

Samir Shah, the BBC chair, sent a letter to Trump to apologise for the edit, the broadcaster said on Thursday, but it added it strongly disagreed there was a basis for a defamation claim.

Trump told reporters on Friday he would sue for anywhere between $1bn and $5bn.

“We’ll sue them for anywhere between a billion and five billion dollars, probably sometime next week. I think I have to do it. They’ve even admitted that they cheated,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One.

Shah told BBC staff in an email on Monday there was speculation about the possibility of legal action, including potential costs or settlements.

“In all this we are, of course, acutely aware of the privilege of our funding and the need to protect our licence fee payers, the British public,” Shah wrote.

“I want to be very clear with you — our position has not changed. There is no basis for a defamation case and we are determined to fight this.”

The documentary, made by a third party, aired in Britain before the US election in November last year. It showed Trump telling supporters “we’re going to walk down to the Capitol” and we “fight like hell”, a comment he made in a different part of his speech. Trump had in fact said supporters would “cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women”.

The edit was made public after the Daily Telegraph published a leaked internal BBC report.

The report, written by an independent adviser, contained wider criticism of the BBC’s news output, including a lack of balance in stories about trans issues, and led to the resignation of the director general, Tim Davie, and head of news Deborah Turness.

Trump’s lawyers said the edit caused the president “overwhelming reputational and financial harm”.

Suing in Florida

They said they would sue in Florida, rather than in Britain, where the one-year limit to file a defamation case has expired.

Trump will face a tougher legal standard in the United States given the protection of freedom of speech in the constitution, the lawyers said.

The BBC is likely to argue that the programme was not broadcast and was not available on its streaming service in the US, so voters in Florida could not have seen it.

The BBC, which is funded by a mandatory levy on TV-watching households, is also widely expected to challenge the reputational harm claim on grounds that Trump went on to win the election, and say the edit was not done in malice.

The issue has triggered wide debate in the UK, and Shah said “we are, of course, acutely aware of the privilege of our funding and the need to protect our licence fee payers, the British public”.

Published in Dawn, November 18th, 2025

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