ABC Boss Apologises to Stan Grant After Q&A Call

ABC Boss Apologises to Stan Grant After Q&A Call
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) Managing Director David Anderson speaks during Senate Estimates at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, on Feb. 14, 2023. AAP Image/Lukas Coch
AAP
By AAP
Updated:

Managing director of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) David Anderson has apologised to journalist Stan Grant after he stepped away from his role as host of the Q&A program, citing exhaustion with persistent racial abuse.

“Stan has our full support. And he has always had our full support,” Anderson wrote in an email to ABC staff. “Stan makes an enormous contribution to conversations of national importance.”

Grant made the decision to leave Q&A last week after racism against him intensified following his involvement in the public broadcaster’s coverage of the King’s coronation.

The veteran correspondent was invited to participate in an ABC TV discussion on coronation day, during which he pointed out that the crown represents the invasion and theft of Aboriginal land.

In his email to ABC staff, Anderson said he agreed with a recommendation from the ABC’s Indigenous advisory committee to review how the broadcaster responds to racism towards staff.

He said anti-ABC reporting from some commercial media outlets had been “sustained and vitriolic.”

“This has real-world consequences for ABC presenters and journalists who are personally attacked and vilified,” he wrote.

“How the ABC supports people in these moments is important. Stan Grant has stated that he has not felt publicly supported. For this, I apologise to Stan.

“The ABC endeavours to support its staff in the unfortunate moments when there is external abuse directed at them.”

A supplied image of Stan Grant talking about his new book The Queen is Dead at the Melbourne Writers Festival in Melbourne, Australia on May 6, 2023. (AAP Image/Supplied by Andrew Guo, Atticus Media)
A supplied image of Stan Grant talking about his new book The Queen is Dead at the Melbourne Writers Festival in Melbourne, Australia on May 6, 2023. AAP Image/Supplied by Andrew Guo, Atticus Media

Grant last week expressed frustration at the ABC’s executives, saying not a single one had publicly refuted the lies that have been written and spoken about him.

“I don’t hold any individual responsible; this is an institutional failure,” he said.

While the ABC’s news director Justin Stevens had been a “support and a comfort” according to Grant, the national broadcaster had its own legacy of racism.

In a statement last week, Stevens said the broadcaster stood by Grant and the abuse was “abhorrent and unacceptable.”

Threats against Grant had been referred to police while a formal complaint had also been lodged with Twitter over user comments.

The ABC Ombudsman would investigate editorial complaints regarding the panel, Stevens said.

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