BBC must not ruin The World Tonight | Letters

Former presenters of Radio 4’s The World Tonight, including Claire Bolderson, Robin Lustig and John Tusa, criticise BBC plans to change to the way the programme is produced

At a time when British politics are dominated overwhelmingly by foreign policy issues, it seems woefully misguided of the BBC to be planning to introduce seriously damaging changes to its sole news programme with an unashamed foreign policy agenda, The World Tonight on Radio 4. We are all former presenters of the programme and we are deeply concerned about the BBC’s proposal to have it produced and presented by the same team that will already have been responsible for the World Service programme Newshour, which serves an entirely different audience.

The World Tonight is broadcast directly after Newshour, which means inevitably that Radio 4 listeners will be served a programme with a largely reheated agenda created for foreign audiences. To reduce the programme’s UK coverage to a bare minimum would severely short-change the very listeners to whom it is meant to appeal, and seriously curtail the programme’s ability to cover late-breaking UK political stories. We urge the BBC to think again about its plans, to enable the programme to continue to serve licence fee payers with the in-depth coverage for which, over nearly 50 years, it has gained an enviable reputation.
Claire Bolderson, Janet Cohen, Isabel Hilton, Robin Lustig, Sheena McDonald, Alexander MacLeod, John Tusa

• Join the debate – email guardian.letters@theguardian.com

• Read more Guardian letters – click here to visit gu.com/letters

• Do you have a photo you’d like to share with Guardian readers? Click here to upload it and we’ll publish the best submissions in the letters spread of our print edition

Letters

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Death of RP not a cause for celebration | Brief letters
Brief letters: Received pronunciation | Tories | Great women interviewees | Bus etiquette | Politeness

Letters

27, May, 2018 @3:41 PM

Article image
Jeremy Hardy, the honorary Jew who held out an olive branch | Letters
Letters: Hardy was a goy who pitched ‘insider’ jokes perfectly, says Naomi Wayne. Philip Clayton wonders why comedians’ deaths seem to touch us more than other famous people, Sarah Cemlyn remembers Hardy as laugh-out-loud funny, and challenging too, while Nancy Krois recalls his News Quiz appearances, L Johnston his Guardian dismissal, and George McLean a King Canute joke

Letters

04, Feb, 2019 @6:29 PM

Article image
Lockdown reviewed for Ambridge residents | Brief letters
Brief letters: NHS rainbow | Barnard Castle | The Archers | Stockings and tights

Letters

28, May, 2020 @4:47 PM

Article image
True words spoken in the heat of the moment | Brief letters
Brief letters: Jenni Murray and menopause | Safer singing | Hard-to-find ingredients | Oxford graffiti | Language of the people

Letters

26, Jul, 2020 @4:34 PM

Article image
Evolving English: what’s not to like? | Letters
Letters: Readers respond to a piece analysing the language of Love Island and share their personal linguistic bugbears

Letters

24, Jun, 2019 @4:59 PM

Article image
BBC Radio 3 is an oasis of calm in troubling times | Letters
Letters: Readers praise Radio 3 for its excellent music programming and for providing comfort during the coronavirus pandemic

Letters

05, May, 2020 @4:46 PM

Article image
Radio 3 cuts threaten musical ecosystem | Letter
Letter: More than 500 signatories from across the arts – including Shirley Collins, Jarvis Cocker, Ed O’Brien, Phil Selway, Peaches, Shabaka Hutchings, Norma Waterson, Martin Carthy, Brian Eno and Iwona Blazwick – call on Radio 3 to think again about changes to its schedules

Letters

19, Mar, 2019 @4:14 PM

Article image
The BBC must tune in with its audiences | Letters
Letters: Jono Read thinks it is a convenient time to consider putting BBC Three back on TV screens, Margaret McGregor says BBC Four should be protected, while Jacqueline Little wants the government to lay off

Letters

09, Mar, 2020 @6:29 PM

Article image
World remembers Spanish flu deaths | Letters
Letters: the Spanish flu is receiving marked attention in its centenary year, writes Hannah Mawdsley

Letters

28, May, 2018 @4:00 PM

Article image
Edward Kelsey obituary
Actor whose rumbling burr as the farmer Joe Grundy captured the spirit of The Archers

Toby Hadoke

25, Apr, 2019 @3:11 PM