The UK government has recommended major reforms in the BBC to rid it of allegations of bias, and to restore its audience's confidence in the public broadcaster. These recommendations were published by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.
Following its first mid-term review, the department stated that the BBC's audiences will be given greater certainty of their complaints being handled more fairly.
The BBC has been perceived as biased by a variety of people. For instance, one poll showed that only one in 25 Jewish people were satisfied with the British broadcaster's coverage of the Israel-Hamas conflict. Others have accused it of a "left-wing bias" since at least the 1980s. Some others have said it has a pro-establishment tilt. It's clear to all that a lack of neutrality is a widely accepted reality of contemporary BBC programming.
The BBC reaches around 400M people worldwide, and among these are audiences containing a wide political spectrum. Recent polling showed the BBC to score higher than any other news outlet in the UK when it came to "doing a good job," and Ofcom found that the broadcaster has maintained its reputation among most people for trusted and accurate reporting. Complaints concerning BBC's bias must be taken with a pinch of salt.