Timeline of BBC Parliament

This is a timeline of the notable events relating to BBC Parliament.

1980s and 1990s

  • 1990
    • No events.
  • 1991
    • United Artists Programming initiates a trial project to provide coverage of Yesterday in the Commons to cable networks across the UK.[2]
  • 1992
    • 13 January – Following on from the success of Yesterday in the Commons, United Artists Cable launches a full time channel providing live and recorded coverage of the British Parliament called The Parliamentary Channel. [3][4]
  • 1993
    • No events.
  • 1994
    • No events.
  • 1996
    • No events.
  • 1997
    • No events.
  • 1998
    • 23 September – Following its purchase of The Parliamentary Channel, the BBC launches BBC Parliament on digital satellite and analogue cable with an audio feed of the channel on DAB.
    • 15 November – The public launch of digital terrestrial TV in the UK takes place. BBC Parliament is carried but due to bandwidth issues, the channel is broadcast in sound only.
  • 1999
    • No events.

2000s

  • 2000
    • 14 November – The audio service broadcast via DAB closes.
  • 2001
    • No events.
  • 2002
    • 3 June – BBC Parliament broadcasts archived programming for the first time when it reruns the BBC's coverage of the Queen's Coronation as part of the Golden Jubilee Weekend.
    • 7 September – Following the success of its rerun of the BBC's coverage of the Queen's Coronation, BBC Parliament replays coverage of archive BBC general election coverage for the first time. The first to be shown is the coverage of the results of the 1979 general election and the following day the channel shows the results programme of the 1997 general election. These reruns have subsequently been a mainstay of the channel and are usually shown to co-inside with anniversaries of their original transmissions.
    • 30 October – A visual feed of BBC Parliament begins broadcasting on digital terrestrial television, having previously only been available as an audio-only service. However capacity limitations mean that the picture is squeezed into just one quarter of the screen with associated text filling the rest of the screen.
  • 2003
    • No events.
  • 2004
    • No events.
  • 2005
    • 5 May – Instead of simulcasting the network coverage of the results of the 2005 United Kingdom general election, BBC Parliament airs BBC Scotland's result night coverage. Two days later, the channel broadcasts a full rerun of the network coverage. This establishes a pattern that BBC Parliament has followed at all subsequent general elections.
    • 5 June – BBC Parliament broadcasts its first theme night of archive programming, to mark the 30th anniversary of the first referendum over Europe by reshowing interviews with the two main party leaders, and broadcasting the two hours of the Referendum results coverage which the BBC retains in its archives.[6]
  • 2006
    • 13 November – BBC Parliament broadcasts in full screen format for the first time on the Freeview service, having previously only been available in quarter screen format.[7] The BBC eventually found the bandwidth to make the channel full-screen after receiving "thousands of angry and perplexed e-mails and letters",[8] not to mention questions asked by MPs in the Houses of Parliament itself.
  • 2007
    • No events.
  • 2009
    • April – BBC Parliament's idents are changed. They retain the Big Ben motif which had been the theme of the set of idents which had been used since the channel's launch a decade earlier.[10]

2010s

  • 2010
    • No events.
  • 2011
    • In House is broadcast for the first time. A replacement of A-Z of Westminster, the new programme is similar in function to its predecessor and seeks to explain some of the strange procedures that occur in Parliament.
  • 2013
    • 14 February – After a four-year hiatus, BBC Parliament resumes broadcasting theme nights of archive programming when it broadcasts an evening of selected archive programmes under the title Harold Wilson Night.[11][12]
  • 2014
    • No events.
  • 2015
    • No events.
  • 2016
    • 5 September – BBC Two begins broadcasting BBC Parliament during its overnight downtime.[13] However is was short-lived and was soon discontinued.
    • 10 October – The channel receives a new look and new idents, its first revamp since 2009. The idents based on clock workings, with colours and images derived from the flags and assemblies of the British home countries and the European Parliament.[14]
  • 2017
    • 12 May – To mark the 80th anniversary of the coronation of King George VI, BBC Parliament shows Pathe's original coverage of the coronation and Pathe's colour film of the coronation processions to and from Westminster Abbey. This is the first time that BBC Parliament has used Pathe's archive to form the bulk of an archive broadcast.
  • 2018
    • 12 July – The BBC announces cut-backs to BBC Parliament. The channel will now close down in the weeks when no UK parliamentary bodies are in session and all programmes made especially for the channel will end.[15]
    • 10 October – The BBC announces it has reversed the planned cuts to the output of BBC Parliament.[16]

2020s

  • 2020
    • 15 July – The BBC announces that it will “no longer commission most of the other bespoke programmes we currently make for BBC Parliament, although we will continue to draw on our archive to broadcast our popular historical election coverage.” This is part of plans the BBC set out at the start of the year to modernise BBC News against the backdrop of having to find £80 million of savings.[17]

References

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