BBC Sets Comprehensive UK General Election Coverage
By: Tyler Peterson Apr. 13, 2015
As the United KINGDOM prepares to elect a new government, the BBC?s international news services will offer a one-stop-shop for audiences around the globe. Whether they are listening to the World Service, watching BBC World News or exploring the online offer at BBC.com/ukelection, audiences will receive the latest updates and analysis as the campaign gains momentum and moves towards the all-important polling day and count on May 7th.
The coverage will recognise the significance of the general election, not just in the United Kingdom, but internationally right across the world. Audiences can rely on the BBC?s trusted team of journalists for reports on all the major milestones.
On BBC World News TV As 2015 marks the 750th anniversary of the first elected Parliament at Westminster, a place associated around the world with democracy at work, BBC World News will take viewers behind the scenes in a new series ?Inside the Commons? by award-winning film maker Michael Cockerell. The four-part documentary goes deep inside the corridors of the Palace of Westminster in the year preceding this election to reveal what really goes on. With exclusive access, never before granted, the series offers a glimpse into the weird and wonderful world of Westminster - with its 2,000 rooms, 110 staircases and miles of corridors - and asks whether Parliament is fit for purpose in the 21st century. Also on the international TV news channel, BBC World News presenters Matthew Amroliwala and Philippa Thomas, along with correspondent Christian Fraser, will guide viewers through the parties and their policies whilst also providing daily round ups, explainers and the key statistics as the campaign moves around the UK. From Washington D.C, the BBC?s NORTH AMERICA Editor Jon Sopel, who has covered many UK elections, will provide insights on the 2015 campaign, as well as a wider perspective on how these events are playing out in the U.S and globally.
On BBC World Service English For radio audiences around the world, World Service English will explore issues which not only matter in Britain but resonate internationally: the increasing electoral strength of smaller parties, disenchantment with mainstream politics, the challenges posed by immigration, arguments about austerity and tackling the global economic crisis, and, with continuing calls for Scottish independence, the rise of regionalism. In ?Who will govern Britain?? Mary Ann Sieghart explores how the parties are planning to form a government if there is no clear winner. Like much of Europe, Britain?s traditional two-party system is fragmenting and smaller parties are gaining significant ground. However, the British first-past-the-post, winner-takes-all model is not designed for this new politics. Mary Ann Sieghart speaks to key players in the negotiations over a coalition government after the last general election, and hears how the parties are planning for what might happen this time around. American writer and satirist PJ O?Rourke often travels the world ? from war zones to Washington DC - writing about the stranger side of politics and foreign affairs. In ?Your ridiculous election?, he travels across Britain trying to work out why party politics in the UK are being shaken up. From the Tory heartlands of the South to Labour?s battle for Scotland, PJ meets the politicians, pundits and the people who get to decide ? the voters. Then on election night, World Service English will broadcast an eleven hour special. Presenters Tim Franks, Philippa Thomas, Karin Gianonne and Julian Keane will guide the BBC?s global radio audience through what is expected to be the most unpredictable British election night in decades, with continuing coverage until the outcome is clear. Announcing the comprehensive coverage promised by the BBC's international services, Richard Porter, Editorial & Digital Director for BBC World News and BBC.com/news <http://BBC.com/news> said: "Election 2015 is a landmark event for Britain and audiences around the world can expect BBC World News to give it the full coverage it deserves. As ever our reporting will reflect the values our global audiences expect from us - covering all sides of the stories, challenging the leading politicians on their policies, giving clarity on the most complex issues. That, combined with respecting and reporting the traditions of Parliament, whilst using the latest technology to help bring clarity to the issues, is what makes the BBC's coverage so distinctive. I hope our audiences will stay with us right the way through to May 7th, and beyond." Controller of World Service English, Mary Hockaday added: ?The World Service will be examining the issues that affect the UK and its place in the world. There is heated debate between the parties about relations with the EU, how to deal with the crisis in Iraq and Syria, the Foreign Aid budget and the UK?s role as an international tax haven. The domestic agenda of austerity, debt reduction, job creation and healthcare are familiar themes around the world. We'll be hearing from the very best BBC and other British political commentators as well as getting global perspectives. As always, our audiences can rely on the BBC World Service to deliver clear, authoritative and impartial coverage of what looks set to be a dramatic election.
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