The Socialist

The Socialist 11 December 2004

Bring the troops home

Bring the troops home

US plans crumble in Iraq


Schools victory!

Private contractors rip off public services

Saving pensions: united action needed

Britain's Guantanamo

Christmas 2004 Appeal Letter


USA: Poverty in the world's richest country

Concrete steps towards formation of new party

Italy stops in fifth general strike against Berlusconi

Belgium: Fighting the fascists in Gent


Challenge to UNISON'S Labour links by UNISON general secretary candidate

BBC jobs under threat

Fighting the fire service cuts

 
 
Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/374/6129

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Printable versionPrintable version

email to friendemail to friend

Facebook

Twitter

Home   |   The Socialist 11 December 2004   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

BBC jobs under threat

NEW BBC director general, Mark Thompson, has announced cuts of £320 million a year, which will result in thousands of job cuts. About 3,000 jobs are expected to go, over 2,000 people will be expected to move to Manchester by 2008.

The jobs, mainly in administration departments, will be cut over the next three years through redundancies and outsourcing.

These cuts are to prepare for the renewal of the BBC's charter in 2007, where the BBC gets its right to be funded by the licence fee.

Molly Cooper, a member of the national executive of the National Union of Journalists (NUJ), told the socialist, in a personal capacity:

"The announcement of up to 6,000 job cuts in the BBC is driven by the desire of New Labour and their paymasters in the media, to see the break up of a publicly-funded BBC. And with it the break up of trade union organisation and agreements for journalists.

"Journalists in the BBC organised in the two media unions, NUJ and BECTU, are now engaged in a political battle with the government to defend their jobs, terms and conditions, and the very future of public-sector broadcasting.

"The NUJ pledge to resist any job cuts, with strike action if necessary, must now be supported by all trade unionists, with the NUJ and BECTU planning joint action to resist these attacks."

ITV IS also planning to cut 50 jobs from its regional newsrooms in Leeds and Manchester. ITV bosses have said they might need public money to continue producing regional news. The NUJ has protested to media regulator Ofcom, pointing out that these job cuts are likely to threaten the quality of future regional news output.

Ofcom will publish the final phase of its review of public service broadcasting early next year.


In this issue

Bring the troops home

US plans crumble in Iraq


Socialist Party campaigns

Schools victory!

Private contractors rip off public services

Saving pensions: united action needed

Britain's Guantanamo

Christmas 2004 Appeal Letter


International socialist news and analysis

USA: Poverty in the world's richest country

Concrete steps towards formation of new party

Italy stops in fifth general strike against Berlusconi

Belgium: Fighting the fascists in Gent


Socialist Party workplace news

Challenge to UNISON'S Labour links by UNISON general secretary candidate

BBC jobs under threat

Fighting the fire service cuts


 

Home   |   The Socialist 11 December 2004   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

BBC:

triangleEurovision hosts are top of the charts for repression

triangleThe boss exploiting China (and Britain)

triangleThe phone-hacking scandal: profits, power and corruption

triangleVideo: TUSC applauded on BBC's Question Time

triangleThe best of 'literary fiction'

triangleVideo: BBC Newsnight studio guest Youth Fight for Jobs' Paul Callanan condemns workfare

Jobs:

triangleUN reports rise in global youth unemployment

triangleBack to work? How the system fails the unemployed

triangleCon-Dems' hypocrisy over children's care

triangleHospital jobs scandal - Action now to save the NHS!

NUJ:

triangleStriking journalists suspend action for talks

triangleSouth Yorkshire Newspapers strike now in seventh week

triangleDemonstration in support of four-week south Yorkshire NUJ strike

Journalists:

triangleLeveson exposes links between Tories and Murdoch

triangleMore murky doings in Murdochland

triangleThe media 'lie factory' exposed