MPs demand Stourton reinstatement
MPs demand Stourton reinstatement
Stourton is said to be "very sad" to be leaving Radio 4's flagship programme |
A cross-party group of MPs is calling for broadcaster Edward Stourton to be reinstated as a presenter on Radio 4's flagship Today programme.
Labour's Keith Vaz - chairman of the Commons Home Affairs Committee - is leading the motion, which also asks the BBC Trust to investigate his removal.
Stourton has said he was not aware of the situation until a journalist rang him for a comment last week.
He is due to continue presenting Today until Justin Webb replaces him in 2009.
'Intellectual rigour'
The BBC made its announcement last Friday, saying that Stourton was leaving "to work on other projects".
But the presenter said he had only learned of his planned departure a day earlier.
"I picked up a message on my phone on Thursday asking me about the rumours that I was about to be sacked, which was the first I had heard of it," he told the Telegraph newspaper.
He also contradicted the BBC's statement, saying he had "no other projects" in the pipeline.
The Commons motion was signed by Labour MPs Harry Cohen and Keith Vaz, Conservatives Peter Luff and Hugo Swire, and Liberal Democrats David Howarth and Bob Russell.
They said they "deplore the sacking" of the broadcaster, and called on Sir Michael Lyons, Chairman of the BBC Trust, to investigate "how his sacking came to be notified to him by a journalist".
They added that "Mr Stourton commands huge respect for the undoubted impartiality and intellectual rigour he brings to the Today programme".
The BBC was not immediately available for comment.
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