BBC viewers outraged over 'bias' as they blast Fiona Bruce's Question Time remark

Lydia Davies

By Lydia Davies


Published: 20/02/2026

- 14:03

The BBC Question Time presenter lost her cool on Thursday

Fiona Bruce is facing renewed accusations of bias following Thursday evening's edition of Question Time.

The 61-year-old presenter found herself at the centre of controversy after a fiery exchange erupted between Reform MP Robert Jenrick and journalist Jon Sopel during the programme.


Viewers have called for the BBC host to be replaced, describing her as a "nightmare" in the wake of the latest row.

The panel for the episode included Labour's Heidi Alexander, Conservative MP Richard Holden, the recently defected Reform representative Mr Jenrick, and podcaster Mr Sopel.

\u200bFiona Bruce

Fiona Bruce is facing renewed accusations of bias

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BBC

The clash between Mr Jenrick and Mr Sopel grew so heated that Ms Bruce was forced to step in, shouting at both men to stop arguing.

During the exchange, Mr Sopel criticised Mr Jenrick for leaving the Conservative Party for Reform, noting he had switched to the party currently leading in the polls while the Tories trail behind.

Mr Jenrick hit back, saying he would not take criticism from someone who had praised Peter Mandelson as “a class act” after his appointment as ambassador to Washington.

“Stop, the pair of you,” Ms Bruce shouted.

Robert Jenrick

A fiery exchange erupted between Reform MP Robert Jenrick and journalist Jon Sopel

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BBC

The presenter then turned to Mr Jenrick, reminding him that his own party leader, Nigel Farage, had also spoken positively about Peter Mandelson when the appointment was announced.

Once calm was restored, Ms Bruce acknowledged the audience had been sidelined, remarking: “My goodness, the audience is sitting here not getting a word in edgeways.”

The programme also saw Ms Bruce challenge Labour MP Heidi Alexander over the government’s position on the two-child benefit cap.

When Ms Alexander attempted to dispute Labour’s stance, Ms Bruce interjected, noting that both Rachel Reeves and Keir Starmer had previously defended keeping the cap as “the right thing to do” and something the country could not afford.

\u200bRobert Jenrick and Nigel Farage

Robert Jenrick joined Reform in January

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GETTY

Ms Alexander pushed back by challenging Ms Bruce’s framing, asking, “Do you? Why?” after the presenter made her claims.

The exchange underscored Labour’s policy reversal, with the party now having lifted the two-child benefit cap after initially refusing to do so.

The government had previously stripped the whip from backbenchers who rebelled against the original stance.

BBC Question Time viewers were quick to weigh in one the on-screen outburst.

One X user penned: "Sad really because I have always rated Bruce. However she does herself no favours with her obvious bias against Reform. Come on Fiona you know better, chair the panel in a fair and reasonable manner."

"Once again it was another pile on reform show with at least 2 plants in the audience and the ever vile Fiona Bruce," a second argued.

A third described the presenter as "grossly bias Fiona Bruce," while another wrote: "The BBC needs to accept that Fiona Bruce is not very good at presenting Question Time."

"Depressing to witness BBC and FT journos behaving like the official opposition to Reform. Fiona Bruce a classic of the genre," someone else shared.

BBC Question Time

BBC Question Time

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BBC

Others did jump to Ms Bruce's defence though, with one adding: "Fiona Bruce franticly shut Robert Jenrick up. They just don't like to hear the truth."

Since taking over BBC Question Time in 2019, Fiona Bruce has faced repeated criticism over impartiality and on-air conduct.

These incidents include factual errors, such as referring to a “Corbyn government” during an exchange with David Lammy, even though Jeremy Corbyn was never Prime Minister.

She has also faced criticism for clashes with figures like Mick Lynch and Zia Yusuf, as well as for comments about Stanley Johnson that prompted her to step down as an ambassador for Refuge.

Ms Bruce later apologised for referring to an audience member in Wolverhampton as “the black guy in the middle,” and her tenure has also drawn comparisons with predecessor David Dimbleby, along with ongoing scrutiny over perceived bias.

Fiona Bruce has been contacted for comment.