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The author Naomi Wolf
On the Mark Steyn Show, Naomi Wolf claimed women were being harmed by Covid vaccines as part of an effort to ‘to destroy British civil society’. Photograph: David Levenson/Getty Images
On the Mark Steyn Show, Naomi Wolf claimed women were being harmed by Covid vaccines as part of an effort to ‘to destroy British civil society’. Photograph: David Levenson/Getty Images

GB News faces second Ofcom inquiry into Covid vaccine coverage

This article is more than 1 year old

Investigation by media regulator follows interview with author Naomi Wolf on show subject to previous complaints

GB News is facing a second investigation by the media regulator Ofcom over its coverage of the coronavirus vaccine.

The latest investigation relates to an interview with the author Naomi Wolf in which she claimed women were being harmed by Covid-19 vaccines as part of an effort to “to destroy British civil society”.

Ofcom said it would investigate whether the programme broke “rules designed to protect viewers from harmful material” after receiving more than 400 complaints from members of the public.

In the interview, which was originally broadcast on 4 October, Wolf also compared doctors’ support for the vaccine rollout to the behaviour of the medical profession in Nazi Germany and described herself as the “last remaining independent journalist” willing to question this.

She was being interviewed on the Mark Steyn Show, which has repeatedly raised doubts over the safety of vaccines. Steyn’s claims that the jabs cause “every conceivable kind of damage” have been disputed by factchecking websites. He is already the subject of a separate Ofcom investigation over previous comments about vaccination.

Wolf began as a prominent feminist writer but in recent years her career has taken a hit after she wrote a book partly based on a misunderstanding of English court records. Since then she has veered into the world of conspiracy theories about the impact of 5G telephone masts and the coronavirus vaccine.

Presenter Matthew Sweet, whose BBC interview exposed the flaw in Wolf’s book, has since kept tabs on her work and GB News’s coverage of the pandemic and accused the channel of repeatedly “broadcasting misinformation about vaccines and presenting conspiracy theorists as legitimate experts on medical matters”.

In a letter to Sweet tweeted last month, GB News insisted that at no point had Steyn’s programme adopted an “anti-vax” approach. Instead it said he was conducting probing journalism in the face of people who want GB News to be “more supportive of government policy”.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Nigel Farage can host GB News show during election, says Ofcom

  • GB News breached impartiality rules, says Ofcom, but will face no sanctions

  • Dan Wootton leaves GB News to set up own ‘independent platform’

  • Ofcom finds GB News broke rules when Laurence Fox ‘demeaned’ journalist

  • GB News has paid more than £660,000 to Tory MPs since its launch

  • GB News’s highest-paid Tory MPs – and how much they have received

  • GB News investigated for possible impartiality breach with Sunak Q&A

  • GB News criticised for confusing two Sikh politicians in social media post

  • Boris Johnson to join GB News as presenter

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