The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) has come under fire after allowing a pro-migration charity to coach asylum seekers with prewritten statements to attack Reform UK’s Zia Yusuf during Question Time, the BBC’s flagship debate show.
| PULSE POINTS |
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) conspired with a pro-migration charity to give prepared statements to boat migrants to confront Reform UK’s Zia Yusuf on Question Time, the BBC’s flagship debate show, in December. 📰 DETAIL: In an episode of Question Time, filmed on December 5, 2025, two asylum seekers confronted Zia Yusuf, Reform UK’s Shadow Home Secretary, with prepared statements. The incident sparked over 1,000 complaints from viewers. On Wednesday, it was revealed that these asylum seekers were arranged, coached, and placed by a pro-migration charity, IMIX. Jenni Regan, the charity’s CEO, also participated in the show. The BBC defended its approach, claiming it sought diverse perspectives. Yusuf accused the BBC of ideological and political bias. This follows reports that pro-migration charities have been used by the BBC to shape its media content and promote pro-migration narratives, including in children’s programming and popular TV shows. One of the prepared statements criticized Reform UK’s policy to leave the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), which is regularly used by pro-migration charities to block the deportations of violent criminals and illegal immigrants. 💬 KEY QUOTE: “The BBC is morally bankrupt. To deliberately plant men who broke into Britain illegally in the audience, allow them to be told what to say and let them launch into attacks on Reform and lecture the British people is disgusting behaviour.” – Zia Yusuf, Shadow Home Secretary for Reform UK 🎯 IMPACT: The incident has intensified scrutiny of the BBC, with accusations of bias and manipulation of public opinion on immigration, despite its legal obligation to remain impartial. Notably, everyone in Britain who watches live programming is required to fund the BBC via a license fee or face criminal fines backed by the threat of imprisonment, even if none of the content they watch is from the BBC. In a post on X (formerly Twitter), Yusuf demanded an apology. “One of these men who broke into the country began reading a statement warning against Britain leaving the ECHR, even featuring the Northern Ireland protocol! One of them specifically attacked me and my family… To conceal it is even more outrageous. They should apologise immediately.” 👀 FLASHBACK: This is not the first time this month the BBC has been accused of bias. On Newsnight, the BBC’s flagship current affairs show, a presenter recently claimed that Nigel Farage had called for “white cold rage” in response to the murder of white teenager Henry Nowak and his mistreatment by police officers, when in reality, the Reform leader had used the phrase “pure cold rage.” The BBC has since apologized to Farage. The Question Time revelations coincide with research that shows that global trust in the news has fallen to a record low. According to the latest Reuters Institute Digital News Report, only 37 percent of people trust the news, marking the lowest level since the study began. In the United Kingdom specifically, trust in the news dropped five percentage points over the past year to 30 percent, down 20 points from a decade ago. Researchers identified that audiences were frustrated with mainstream news coverage of immigration, among other matters. |
🚨The BBC caught red handed.
Remember the Question Time episode where illegal migrants were planted in the audience to lecture me and the country on our border policy?
We now have *confirmation* the BBC PLANTED there and they were COACHED on what to say by a charity pushing for… pic.twitter.com/uZqeXNqSqF
— Zia Yusuf (@ZiaYusufUK) June 17, 2026
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