Welcome, Guest. Please Login
YaBB - Yet another Bulletin Board
  To join this Forum send an email with this exact subject line REQUEST MEMBERSHIP to bbcstaff@gmx.com telling us your connection with the BBC.
  HomeHelpSearchLogin  
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print
Patten confirmed (Read 3560 times)
Administrator
YaBB Administrator
*****
Offline



Posts: 3268

Patten confirmed
Feb 25th, 2011, 5:24pm
 
This is taken from the Guardian:

Lord Patten confirmed as 'preferred candidate' for BBC Trust chairman
David Cameron approves appointment and Patten now faces a pre-appointment hearing on 10 March
by Jason Deans, Friday 25 February 2011 15.32 GMT


The government on Friday confirmed that Lord Patten is its "preferred candidate" to become the next BBC Trust chairman.

Patten's appointment has been approved by the prime minister, David Cameron, and the former Conservative cabinet minister and chairman now faces one final hurdle before getting the job – a pre-appointment hearing before MPs on the Commons culture, media and sport select committee on 10 March. The committee is chaired by Tory MP John Whittingdale.

The committee's conclusions will be "considered carefully" by the culture secretary, Jeremy Hunt, but it has no formal power to block Patten's appointment. Barring a major reversal the former Hong Kong governor is expected to take up the BBC chairmanship after the hearing next month, once the appointment has been signed off by the Queen.

Patten is being lined up to succeed Sir Michael Lyons, who is stepping down in at the end of April.

That would propel Patten into the £110,000-a-year, four-day a week role at a time when the public broadcaster has just asked for 20% cuts to meet the flat licence fee settlement imposed by the government last year.

Patten – aged 66 and currently chancellor of Oxford University – made it clear to Hunt and an interview panel that he badly wanted the BBC job as the final act in a long career in politics and public life.

But whereas Hunt felt that his predecessor, Lyons, had too cosy a relationship with director general Mark Thompson and the BBC executive, the culture secretary believes Patten would not hesitate to tell BBC bosses where they have got it wrong.

Hunt put Patten's name forward to Cameron earlier this month after he was chosen following interviews with a number of candidates.

Patten's closest rival was Sir Richard Lambert, the former director general of the CBI and one-time editor of the Financial Times.

Other candidates were Dame Patricia Hodgson, the principal of Newnham College, Cambridge; Richard Hooper, a former chairman of the Radio Authority; and Anthony Fry, the investment banker.
Back to top
 

The Administrator.
 
IP Logged
 
Administrator
YaBB Administrator
*****
Offline



Posts: 3268

Patten: I won't be popular at the BBC
Reply #1 - Mar 12th, 2011, 6:53pm
 
Lord Patten told MPs yesterday that if he was confirmed as the new chairman of the BBC he would expect to be unpopular – and predicted that "there will be all hell let loose" as the corporation is forced to cut spending on programming.

"There are going to be huge fusses about it, there will be petitions, there will be blogs, there will be websites and there will be all hell let loose," he said as he was scrutinised by the Culture, Media and Sport Committee over his government-proposed appointment as the chairman of the BBC Trust. "I don't think it's going to be a particularly popular job in the next few years."

The former Conservative cabinet minister refused demands from Labour to give up membership of his party and insisted he would also retain other controversial roles, including membership of BP's advisory board and a position as a business ambassador for the Prime Minister.

He was asked by the Labour MP Tom Watson whether there was a conflict of interest in his being chairman of a broadcaster that might be covering events such as the Gulf of Mexico oil spill or the Libyan uprising. "A conflict of interest would be if you were... using your position at the BBC Trust in some unreasonable way," he replied.

The former Conservative Party chairman will retain his role as Chancellor of Oxford University. He also wishes to remain on the trust body for the Catholic newspaper The Tablet. But he has decided to step down from his positions with the International Crisis Group and Medical Aid for Palestine. "I recognised that that would be regarded by some as conflicting and too controversial," he said.

Lord Patten, the former Governor of Hong Kong, told the committee that the BBC was the greatest public service broadcaster in the world. "I don't feel any shame at all in asserting what we now call Reithian principles at the BBC," he said. "It's really important that it should stand for the most civilised aspects of being British."

Asked by Therese Coffey MP what the most important values of the BBC were, he said: "I think the BBC should be biased. It should be biased in favour of tolerant, civilised pluralism. I think it should continue to reflect the cultural identity and diversity of this country."

He rejected the suggestion that the corporation had an inbuilt bias and went out of his way to praise the BBC's Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen and its political editor Nick Robinson. Of the supposed urban liberal leanings of the BBC, Lord Patten reflected that in 1966 he had chosen a first job in the Conservative research department in preference to the offer of a graduate traineeship at the BBC. Had he followed the other path he might not now be considered an old-fashioned Tory but a "metrosexual leftie", he observed, to laughs from the gallery.

Suave and witty, he remained unruffled during what had been billed as a grilling. He said BBC executives couldn't expect to receive the remuneration they might expect at "Barclays bank", and that ageism at the corporation was unacceptable, particularly as it might rule him out of a job.

His weakest moments came when he was challenged on his knowledge of BBC programmes. Had he listened to 6 Music? "No." Radio 1? "When trying to get to [Radio] 3 or 4." That got another laugh, but Labour MP David Cairns was unimpressed. "I'm not getting the passion," he complained. "The only passion you've demonstrated is a passion for Melvyn Bragg."

By:- Ian Burrell

Source:-
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/tv-radio/patten-i-wont-be-popular-at-the...
Back to top
 

The Administrator.
 
IP Logged
 
Dickie Mint
Senior Member
****
Offline



Posts: 261
Solihull, West Midlands
Gender: male
Re: Patten confirmed
Reply #2 - Mar 13th, 2011, 11:16am
 
I particularly liked :-
"Lord Patten, the former Governor of Hong Kong, told the committee that the BBC was the greatest public service broadcaster in the world. "I don't feel any shame at all in asserting what we now call Reithian principles at the BBC," he said. "It's really important that it should stand for the most civilised aspects of being British.""

Unfortunately he's a tory, so no change to the BBC, then!

Richard
Back to top
 

Regards,
Richard
 
IP Logged
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print