BBC executives have rejected two complaints alleging bias against Scottish independence.
The first complaint argued that pro-independence viewpoints had not been “sufficiently represented” in a broadcast of BBC Scotland’s Debate Night on May 13, the week after the 2026 Holyrood elections.
The Debate Night broadcast featured four Unionist voices – a Reform MSP, Tory MSP, Labour MSP, and a journalist with the right-wing magazine the Spectator – but only one on the pro-independence side, SNP MSP Paul McLennan.
Tomorrow, join Debate Night from Haddington On the panel: Paul McLennan, Kim Schmulian, Katherine Sangster, Douglas Lumsden, and Isabel Hardman Weds 13th, 9pm on @BBCScotland and @BBCiPlayer Apply to be in the audience now: https://t.co/UxxKWtFY2y #bbcdn pic.twitter.com/MHQ6gzErni
— BBC Debate Night (@bbcdebatenight) May 12, 2026
A viewer complained to the BBC that this was not representative of the fact that “the previous week’s election to the Scottish Parliament had produced the highest number of pro-independence MSPs since devolution”.
However, the BBC’s executive complaints unit said that while programmes like Debate Night are “required to give due weight to all main strands of argument over time … there is no requirement to reflect a particular configuration of viewpoints on every occasion”.
A decision further said that “due impartiality did not require stronger representation of pro-independence viewpoints on the panel”.
A second complaint focused on a Radio Scotland broadcast on May 27 in which a BBC presenter suggested, in a question to former SNP minister Alex Neil, that the result of a second independence referendum “wouldn’t be what the Yes side are after”.
A listener complained to the BBC, saying that the “terms of the question were incompatible with the neutrality of the interviewer’s role”.
However, the broadcaster’s executive complaints unit ruled that the BBC host had not been expressing their own opinion on how a second independence referendum might go.
A decision said: “The interview had been prompted by the First Minister’s call for Westminster to give the Scottish Parliament the power to hold a second independence referendum.
“Mr Neil criticised this approach and called on the SNP ‘to run a consistent campaign to build up support for independence to a much higher level’, arguing it was necessary to get public support to between 55% and 60% to demonstrate independence was ‘the settled will of the Scottish people’.
“The interviewer’s question engaged directly with Mr Neil’s points and her suggestion that the result of an immediate referendum might not be ‘what the Yes side are after’ was a logical extension of the position he had just outlined, not an expression of her own opinion.”
Elsewhere, a BBC report published on Thursday also revealed that 160 people had lodged a complaint about former Sky News host Kay Burley defending the former prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor as a “war hero”, and 133 people had complained that a BBC Radio 4 report had said that the Al-Aqsa Mosque, in Palestine in East Jerusalem, was “in Israel”.