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Andrew Neil reveals he quit GB News after differences over future direction – video

‘I was a minority of one’: Andrew Neil reveals why he quit GB News

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The veteran presenter says he left the fledgling station after a disagreement about the direction it was heading in

Andrew Neil has said he stepped down as chairman of GB News after differences over the direction in which the channel was heading.

The journalist and broadcaster appeared on BBC’s Question Time on Thursday night days after announcing his departure from the fledgling channel in a tweet where he said it was “time to reduce my commitments on a number of fronts”.

GB News launched in June with Neil saying it would not “slavishly follow the existing news agenda”, would cover “the stories that matter to you and those that have been neglected” and deliver “a huge range of voices that reflect the views and values of our United Kingdom”.

Neil told Question Time the launch of the channel could not be described as a “startling success” and that he felt he was in a “minority of one” about its future.

“More and more differences emerged between myself and the other senior managers and the board of GB News,” he said.

“Rather than these differences narrowing, they got wider and wider and I felt it was best that if that’s the route they wanted to take then that’s up to them, it’s their money.

“The route is what I think you can see on GB News at the moment, people should make up their own minds what they want to watch.”

Nigel Farage has since become the main evening presenter and the channel is looking to hire more of his former Brexit party stablemates in what appears to be a move to the right of the political spectrum.

A number of big names joined the channel for its launch including ITV News journalist Alastair Stewart, BBC journalist Simon McCoy and and former Labour MP Gloria De Piero.

Guto Harri quit the channel following a row over him taking the knee during a debate on the racism directed towards England football players, while other staff members have reportedly left.

Neil said: “I thought it wasn’t for me, I had wanted a different route – it doesn’t mean that I’m right or they’re wrong but it certainly was a difference.

“The differences were such that the direction they were going in was not the direction that I had outlined, it was not the direction I had envisaged for the channel.

“But I was in a minority of one, so it’s doing what it’s doing and it’s up to them. Good luck to them if that’s what they want to do.”

After Neil’s announcement on Monday, a statement from GB News said: “Andrew is without doubt one of the finest journalists and interviewers in this country.

“GB News thanks him for his 12 months of leadership, wisdom and advice and we wish him well.”

The television space that GB news inhabits will soon find another occupant after Rupert Murdoch announced that Piers Morgan – often touted as a possible saviour of GB News – will front a a new channel called talktv.

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