has locked horns with TV presenter over, insisting the broadcaster’s ‘salad days are in the past’.
The Culture Secretary exchanged messages with the Location, Location, Location star on Twitter over an opinion piece by Dorries in the Mail on Sunday, addressing the Government’s decision to push ahead with plans to sell off the channel.
The politician wrote that former Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher – who set up Channel 4 in 1982 – had ultimately wanted it to be ‘free from the constraints of the state’ and described opposition to the move as ‘lazy, overwrought and ill-informed rhetoric from the Leftie luvvie lynch mob’.
Kirstie, who presents her property show on the channel, responded on Twitter, questioning whether it was ‘really ministerial’ to describe those contesting privatisation as a ‘lynch mob’ while ‘at the same time complaining about having been accused of fascism’.
Sharing an article about the US Senate passing an anti-lynching Bill, she added: ‘This piece might make you think twice about using the term.’
The Government confirmed last week that it will, which has been publicly owned since it was founded in 1982 and is funded by advertising.
The presenter responded to the announcement by tweeting that ‘no true Conservative would sell Channel 4’ and that ‘Lady T will be spinning in her grave’.
Replying to her posts on Sunday night, Dorries suggested Margaret Thatcher’s memoirs, The Downing Street Years, proved she intended Channel 4 to be sold.
She also said the broadcaster couldn’t be preserved in its current state because of ‘decreasing advertising revenue and decreasing investment in new content’.
The Tory MP added: ‘There is of course the bonus a sale will bring to the entire sector which is that the proceeds of sale will be invested back into people from all backgrounds, especially those from left-behind communities because talent is everywhere, not just in the SE.
‘We will invest in skills in order to benefit from incoming demand due to our booming film and TV sector due to the favourable tax benefit/relief and funding this gov has put in place to encourage film industry to regard Britain as its home.
‘I also love C4, especially Location Location, but as I say in my article, it’s time to look to the future. The channel’s salad days are in the past. Being owned by the Gov is restrictive. Time for C4 to fly the nest towards a very exciting future.’
Plans for the sale will reportedly be set out in a White Paper later this month and will be included in a new Media Bill for next spring.
A string of Tory MPs and peers, including Sir Peter Bottomley, former Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson, chairman of the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) committee Julian Knight, and former cabinet ministers Damian Green and Jeremy Hunt have publicly questioned the plans.
Sir Peter, who represents Worthing West, said he opposes the sale ‘because I am a Conservative’.