Rod Liddle
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Rod Liddle (born 1960) is a controversial British journalist best known for his term as editor of BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
Liddle was born in South London but brought up in Nunthorpe, Teesside. He was educated at Laurence Jackson comprehensive school in Guisborough (also Teesside), and while there formed a punk band called "Dangerbird" with some friends. He attended the London School of Economics. Liddle was a member of the Socialist Workers Party in his youth but worked between 1983 and 1987 for the Labour Party Shadow Cabinet. He then returned to journalism.
His early journalistic experience was with the South Wales Echo in Cardiff where he was a general news reporter and, for a time, the rock and pop writer. Liddle was appointed editor of the Today programme in 1998, having previously been deputy editor. Today was known for its political interviews, but Liddle's approach was to use the programme to 'break' new stories. To this end he hired journalists from outside the BBC, who critics claimed were not as familiar with the BBC's reporting culture and guidelines. Among the most controversial was Andrew Gilligan, who joined from the Sunday Telegraph in 1999. Gilligan's 29 May 2003 report on Today began a chain of events that led to the Hutton inquiry. Gilligan's reporting was criticized by Lord Hutton in his report and by a BBC Panorama documentary. However, Liddle was not editor of the programme at this time: during his five years of tenure there had been no legal problems with any of his reporters.
Under Liddle's editorship Today won a number of UK radio awards - a Sony Silver in 2002 for reports by Barnie Choudhury and Mike Thomson into the causes of race riots in the north of England; a Sony Bronze in 2003 for an investigation by Angus Stickler into paedophile priests; and an Amnesty International Media Award in 2003 for Gilligan's investigation into the sale of illegal landmines.
In addition to his work on the Today programme, Liddle wrote a column under his own name for The Guardian newspaper. On September 25, 2002, he titled his column 'Marching back to Labour': making reference to a march organized by the Countryside Alliance in defence of fox hunting, Liddle wrote that readers may have forgotten why they voted Labour but would remember once they saw the people campaigning to save hunting.
The BBC considered this unacceptably partisan and gave Liddle an ultimatum either to end his column or resign. Liddle resigned on 30 September 2002. With Kate Silverton he went on to present BBC2 political show Weekend, BBC4's The Talk Show. He also continued to write for The Guardian, wrote a critically acclaimed book of short stories entitled Too Beautiful for You, became a team captain on Call My Bluff and also took a job as Associate Editor at The Spectator. He now also writes a weekly column for The Sunday Times.
He defended Andrew Gilligan in the media during the Hutton inquiry.
In 2004 his personal life was the subject of much comment when he cut short his honeymoon to return to London so he could be with his girlfriend Alicia Monckton (a receptionist at The Spectator); his marriage ended in a swift divorce. His philandering was dramatized in Toby Young's play Who's The Daddy?. Some opinions in his columns have sometimes brought controversy: he once said that cigarettes were not as bad for you as doctors and nurses, and that he thought Geordies were like "monkeys and morons". There is traditional rivalry between Tyneside and the Teesside where Liddle was raised, and he frequently adopts a jocose, mocking tone in all his writing.
Two Channel 4 television programmes presented by Liddle in 2006 attracted a great deal of controversy. In The New Fundamentalists, a programme in the Dispatches strand, Liddle - who attends a Church of England church - condemned the rise of evangelicalism and/or Christian fundamentalism in Britain, especially the anti-Darwinian influence of such beliefs in faith schools; and criticised the social teaching and cultural influence of this strand of Christianity. In The Trouble with Atheism, Liddle argued that atheists can be as dogmatic and intolerant as the adherents of religion. "History has shown us," he says, "that it’s not religion that’s the problem, but any system of thought that insists that one group of people are inviolably in the right, whereas the others are in the wrong and must somehow be punished." Liddle argues, for example, that eugenic policies are the logical consequence of dogmatic adherence to Darwinism.
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[edit] Criticisms
In 2005, Liddle was criticized by the MCB leader Sir Iqbal Sacranie [1] when he said, "The one we didn't want to hear, is the most accurate: Sacranie and Mr Bunglawala don't like Jews. They are both unequivocal anti-Semites", after they had suggested a Genocide memorial day was more appropriate than simply a Holocaust memorial day.
Mr Bunglawala responded by affirming that:
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- "Instead of addressing the issue in an evidence-based manner, Liddle resorts to histrionics and smearing, referring to Sir Iqbal Sacranie and myself as anti-Semites. We are not. It seems in order to qualify as a Liddle-approved 'moderate' Muslim one needs to remain silent about Israeli crimes against the Palestinian people."
It was also alleged that Liddle ignored the following statement made by the MCB about Holocaust Memorial Day earlier in the year.
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- "The Nazi Holocaust was a truly evil and abhorrent crime and we stand together with our fellow British Jews in their sense of pain and anguish. None of us must ever forget how the Holocaust began. We must remember it began with a hatred that dehumanised an entire people, that fostered state brutality, made second class citizens of honest, innocent people because of their religion and ethnic identity."
Liddle was heavily criticised by pro-Muslim groups following the broadcast of his Channel 4 documentary 'Immigration Is A Time Bomb' Amongst the complaints were that Liddle allowed BNP leader Nick Griffin to speak "unchallenged when arguing for freedom of speech" and that he "stated that Griffin should not have been arrested for stating his views" for incitement to racial hatred for which he had already received a two year suspended sentence in 1998. [4].
Ofcom adjudicated that the programme was entirely fair. The complaints were dismissed.
In February 2006 he wrote an article in The Sunday Times ('Alas, I must defend the BNP') supporting BNP leader Nick Griffin's right to free speech, after Griffin had been arrested for inciting racial hatred.
[edit] Personal
Liddle claims to have supported Millwall Football Club since the age of seven. He frequently attends home games.