Today’s news summary – Paper Talk
Most of Sunday’s front pages reflect the impact of a day of disruption for sports programming at the BBC following the decision to ask Match of the Day host Gary Lineker to step aside.
Sunday Papers – BBC blackout and pressure on government asylum plan
According to the Mail on Sunday, the BBC experienced a “day of unprecedented drama” due to the lack of football coverage after Gary Lineker was removed from air. The paper reports that TV and radio schedules had to be hastily rearranged because other presenters and pundits refused to appear on the shows. The Mail describes the incident as an “astonishing staff mutiny.”
Meanwhile, the Sunday Express reports that the “blackout” caused “BBC bosses to scramble to fill the schedule.” BBC One was left without Football Focus or Final Score, and instead aired episodes of Bargain Hunt and the Repair Shop, according to the Sunday Telegraph.
The Sunday Times claims to have insider knowledge of “24 hours of anarchy” at the corporation following Lineker’s suspension. One staff member reportedly described the situation as “so farcical” that it could be a plotline for the mockumentary series, W1A. Potential replacement hosts for Match of the Day were reportedly concerned about being seen as “scabs,” and some sources claimed that agents refused the job on behalf of their clients.
Ahead of the proposed debate on Monday, the Observer covers the controversy surrounding Gary Lineker and the government’s new asylum policy. The paper reports that the former Home Secretary, Priti Patel, is considering a “potentially explosive intervention” regarding the bill’s impact on detaining children.
In the Sunday Mirror, Labour peer Baroness Lister predicts that many members of the House of Lords will reject the legislation as “cruel and inhumane.”
The Immigration Minister, Robert Jenrick, acknowledges the toughness of the plans but tells the Sunday Express that the asylum system is currently at a “breaking point.”