BBC World Service was covering the US elections and gave a brief blurb to inform non-US listeners on the basic differences between republicans and democrats. They essentially said something like:
Democrats prefer a big government with a tax-and-spend culture while republicans favor minimal governance with running on a lean budget, less spending¹
That’s technically accurate enough but it seemed to reflect a right-wing bias that seems inconsistent with BBC World Service. I wouldn’t be listening to BBC if they were anything like Fox News (read: faux news). The BBC could have just as well phrased it this way:
“Democrats prefer a government that is financed well enough to ensure protection of human rights…”
It’s the same narrative but expressed with dignity. When they are speaking on behalf of a political party it’s an attack on their dignity and character to fixate on a side-effect rather than the goal and intent. A big tax-and-spend gov is not a goal of dems, it’s a means to achieve protection of human rights. It’s a means that has no effective alternative.
① Paraphrasing from what I heard over the air -- it’s not an exact quote
#BBC #BBCWorldService
It's not accurate, technically or otherwise. It's how Republicans, and only Republicans, describe the difference between the parties, and as usual it's a lie. I'd like to know why BBC is airing Republican propaganda as if it's a factual description of anything.