Timothy Douglas Davie (born 25 April 1967) is a British media executive who became the director-general of the BBC in September 2020; he announced his resignation on 9 November 2025 amid allegations against the corporation of editorial bias. He was previously the acting director-general of the BBC in November 2012 following the resignation of George Entwistle, until April 2013.
Educated at Whitgift School and the University of Cambridge, Davie unsuccessfully stood as a candidate for the Conservative Party in 1993 and 1994 in the Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council elections. He joined the BBC in 2005, following a career in marketing. During his time as acting director-general he oversaw the investigations into BBC management and conduct following revelations the broadcaster had known about sexual abuse by Jimmy Savile.
Davie unsuccessfully stood as a councillor for the Conservative Party in the Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council elections in 1993 and 1994 and was deputy chairman of the Hammersmith and Fulham Conservative Association in the 1990s.
Davie took over as acting Director-General on 11 November 2012, following the resignation of George Entwistle in the wake of the Newsnight broadcast that did not name any individual but led to Internet speculation, which incorrectly identified Conservative Lord McAlpine in the North Wales child abuse case. During his time as acting director-general he oversaw the investigations into BBC management and conduct following revelations the broadcaster had known about sexual abuse by Jimmy Savile. Davie became chief executive officer of BBC Worldwide following the appointment of Tony Hall. BBC Worldwide merged with the TV-making arm of the BBC, BBC Studios, in April 2018 and Davie served as both the Chief Executive of BBC Studios and a Director globally.
He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2018 Birthday Honours for services to international trade. In 2019 he earned £642,000 and was the BBC's highest paid executive.
In January 2020, Tony Hall announced he was resigning from the Director-General's position before the scheduled end of his tenure. In May 2020, Davie was one of four candidates shortlisted to succeed Hall in the position. On 5 June 2020, it was announced he would become the corporation's seventeenth Director-General from 1 September.
In October 2020, Davie set out new guidelines for BBC staff, stating that they should avoid expressing their personal views on current issues of political controversy (which he called "virtue signalling") on their own private social media accounts. He said this was to reduce perceived bias in the BBC. This would include a ban on news reporters taking part in "public demonstrations or gatherings about controversial issues", with some BBC managers citing trans rights and Black Lives Matter as examples. Davie later said that journalists could attend events such as Gay pride marches if they were "celebratory" and not "taking a stand on politicised or contested issues".
Davie has stated: "As editor in chief of the BBC I think one of our founding principles is impartiality and that's what we are delivering on". A former Conservative Party candidate, Davie announced his intention in August 2020 for the BBC to "find a better balance of satirical targets rather than constantly aiming jokes at the Tories." He announced his support of the licence fee as opposed to a Netflix style subscription service.
In December 2021, Davie was elected to the Executive Board of the European Broadcasting Union. He was re-elected in December 2022 to serve a further two years on the Board, until December 2024.
Davie oversaw major cuts to BBC Local Radio content in late Summer 2023, resulting in the reduction of locally produced content to just eight hours per day from Monday to Friday and no weekend coverage (with the exception of live men's football commentary). The implementation of the cuts was criticised, with MPs referring to the redundancy process as "workplace bullying" and the cuts in general as "managing decline".
In November 2023, Danny Cohen, a former director of television for the BBC, alleged that the organisation was "institutionally antisemitic" especially in its coverage of Israel. The previous month, Davie had apologised to the 1922 Committee (backbench group of Conservative MPs) for some inaccuracies in the BBC's coverage of the Gaza war.
In March 2024, Davie announced a review of the BBC licence fee with a focus on reforms.
Deborah Turness, CEO of BBC News, also announced her resignation at the same time.
Previously, he has been on the boards of Freesat, Everyone TV and Children in Need.
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