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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
National
Casey Cooper-Fiske

Have I Got News For You’s Euan Blair false claim blamed on ‘digital natives’

Jimmy Mulville has said the mistake on Have I Got News For You was down to ‘digital native’ producers (Stefan Rousseau/PA) - (PA Archive)

A false claim made about Euan Blair on BBC panel show Have I Got News For You has been blamed on “digital native” producers.

The first episode in a new series of the programme saw it incorrectly claimed by presenter Victoria Coren Mitchell that a contract to roll out the Government’s new ID cards has been handed to Multiverse, a company run by the son of former prime minister Tony Blair.

Speaking about the mistake, Jimmy Mulville, the founder of the programme’s producers Hat Trick Productions, said on Insiders: The TV Podcast: “What was interesting was this, and this is why I want to talk about it, is that because we now have generations of younger producers who are coming into the business, and they are digital natives, they’re called.

“They’re marinated in social media, and I said, ‘where did we get this story?’, and apparently, the story was put on by a freelance journalist, I won’t mention her name, a freelance journalist who put on her Twitter feed this story about Euan Blair and ID cards.

“And the producer said, ‘well, it had nearly three million views that day’, so it must be true, and no one questioned it.

“I went, ‘ok, and did we verify anywhere else?’, and then faces became very red around the table, and god bless them, they’re a fantastic team, and they felt terrible about this, really, really awful.

“Which is the right response, and so we’ve now got a new rule, we don’t take stories off social media.”

Mulville said that “normally” his team finds a second source before writing the show’s script but said it “just got through the net”.

The post referred to in the podcast is still live on X, where it has been viewed almost three million times.

Mulville added: “It’s not defamatory in any way, in fact, the lawyers didn’t pick up on it, our lawyers and the BBC lawyers, didn’t pick up on it.

“It’s a low level mistake, but nevertheless, it is indicative, and it was good to spot it, because what you wouldn’t want to do is to make some kind of egregious claim about somebody and it is defamatory.”

The BBC apologised for the mistake following the broadcast and the episode was removed from iPlayer last weekend where it was edited and reuploaded to omit the incorrect information, while Coren Mitchell also took to X to correct the error.

The BBC has been contacted for further comment.

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