Ofcom Rules GB News Broke Broadcasting Rules Over COVID Booster and Death Rates Claims

Ofcom Rules GB News Broke Broadcasting Rules Over COVID Booster and Death Rates Claims
The Ofcom (Office of Communications) logo on the front of its headquarters in London, on Jan. 18, 2007. (Bruno Vincent/Getty Images)
Owen Evans
3/6/2023
Updated:
3/6/2023

Britain’s media regulator Ofcom has concluded that an episode of the Mark Steyn show on GB News broke its broadcasting rules and was “potentially harmful and materially misleading.”

On Monday, Ofcom ruled that the Mark Steyn programme, which aired on GB News on April 21 last year, was in breach of its broadcasting rules.

Ofcom ruled that the show “presented a materially misleading interpretation of official data without sufficient challenge or counterweight, risking harm to viewers.”

Steyn was a presenter at the channel, but he left in February amid a dispute over contract terms he claimed could have made him personally liable for Ofcom fines.

‘Fatally Flawed’

In its ruling (pdf), Ofcom said that the programme’s presentation of UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) data and the way it used the data to draw conclusions “materially misled the audience.”

It had received four complaints about comments made by the presenter that, the complainants said, drew “dangerous” and “fatally flawed conclusions” from UKHSA statistics.

The regulator concluded that this programme “incorrectly claimed that official UKHSA data provided definitive evidence that there was a causal link between receiving the third COVID-19 booster vaccine and higher infection, hospitalisation, and death rates.”

It added that this was “misleading” because the programme “failed to reflect that the reports made clear that the raw data contained within them should not be used to draw conclusions about vaccine efficacy, due to the biases inherent in those in the vaccinated and unvaccinated populations.”

“Given these misleading claims were broadcast as part of a factual programme on a news and current affairs service and may have resulted in viewers making important decisions about their own health, we concluded that the programme was potentially harmful and materially misleading, in breach of Rule 2.2 of the Broadcasting Code,” the ruling said.

In March 2020, Ofcom issued a Note to Broadcasters (pdf), reminding them it “will consider any breach arising from harmful Coronavirus-related programming to be potentially serious and will consider taking appropriate regulatory action, which could include the imposition of a statutory sanction.”

‘Prescient’

On his own website, Steyn said that he “intends to appeal this and get it before a real court.”

A spokesperson for GB News told The Epoch Times by email that they were “disappointed” by the finding and noted that “Mark Steyn has left GB News and has not broadcast on the channel for three months.”

“GB News exists to allow freedom of speech and freedom of thought to flourish. We believe a willingness to debate and disagree is vital for an open and honest society,” he said.

“We are disappointed by Ofcom’s finding. Our role in media is to ask tough questions, point out inconsistencies in government policy, and hold public bodies to account when the facts justify it. Mark Steyn’s programme did exactly that,” he added.

GB News said that the channel supports Steyn’s “right to challenge the status quo by examining the small but evident risks of the third COVID booster.”

In an apparent reference to leaked WhatsApp messages showing former Health Secretary Matt Hancock intended to frighten the public into compliance with lockdown rules, the spokesperson said: “As news stories in the last week have highlighted, it was prescient to question whether the government was candid with all the facts. It is an important story in the public interest.”

“Mr. Steyn looked at evidence from the government’s own health data. He drew a reasonable conclusion from the facts. However, he drew only one conclusion. We accept that the data offered several valid interpretations, and he should have made this clear. Had he done so, the story would have remained within the wide freedoms that Ofcom’s Broadcast Code allows,” he added.

The news channel, which features presenters such as Calvin Robinson, Lawrence Fox, and Andrew Doyle, said it “chose to work in a regulated environment, and we take Ofcom compliance seriously.”

“In our 20 months and more than 11,000 hours of live broadcasting, this is Ofcom’s only finding against our television licence. It has not imposed a sanction. It remains our mission to challenge anyone who adopts a purely binary position on unfolding news events; their assumption that a government’s narrative is the only legitimate version of events, and that everything else is ’misinformation,'” said the spokesperson.

Naomi Wolf in an undated file photo. (Ruilian Song/The Epoch Times)
Naomi Wolf in an undated file photo. (Ruilian Song/The Epoch Times)

Naomi Wolf

Ofcom said that an additional investigation into an episode of Mark Steyn, which aired on Oct. 4, 2022, remains ongoing.

The regulator is considering whether comments made during an interview with American author and journalist Naomi Wolf about the COVID-19 vaccine rollout raised potential issues under its Broadcasting Code.

Ofcome said that it had received 411 viewer complaints about Wolf’s comments.

It is believed that Wolf describing the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines as “mass murder” is being investigated.

At the time, Wolf told The Epoch Times that “questioning the scientific conventional wisdom and government policies that are based on it is not harmful, but rather, is exactly what the world needs right now.”

The Epoch Times contacted Mark Steyn for comment.