Ofcom rules in favour of LBCâs James OâBrien over Institute of Economic Affairs âdark moneyâ comments
IEA hits back, saying Ofcom has allowed radio presenter to âissue falsehoods... without any attempt at reasonable fact-checkingâ

LBCâs James OâBrien has won a two-year media regulator battle after Ofcom ruled in his favour and against the Institute of Economic Affairs, after the radio presenter described the charity as a âlobby groupâ funded by âdark moneyâ.
Ofcom cleared LBC of any offence during OâBrienâs shows in early 2019, saying it found that âmaterial facts were not presented, disregarded or omitted in the programmes in a way that was unfair to the IEAâ.
The registered charity and right-wing think tank complained to Ofcom, accusing the radio station and its host of making a series of unfair comments.
It took objection to the statements by presenter which referred to the IEA as a âlobby groupâ whose representatives were ânot actors of good faithâ or âproper expertsâ, and it was called an organisation of âquestionable provenance, with dubious ideas and validityâ, according to a document detailing Ofcomâs decision.
During the show with guest Peter Geoghegan, OâBrien called the institute a âhard-right lobby group for vested interests of big business, fossil fuels, tobacco, junk foodâ and urged media organisations not to quote it âas an educational charity, because they donât reveal who funds themâ.
Ofcom said following its investigation: âWe considered that the presenterâs claims about the IEA and its activities was clearly presented in the programme as being his own personal impressions, based on the outcome of investigations which had been carried out by openDemocracy and conclusions drawn by the Charity Commission in its Official Warning, which had explicitly stated that the IEA had been âengaging in campaigning and lobbying activityâ.â
The 2019 broadcast in question came after an investigation by the political news website openDemocracy which alleged links between senior Conservatives and the IEA.
In February 2019 the Charity Commission officially warned the IEA for allegedly using its resources to campaign for a hard Brexit. The warning was later formally withdrawn âin light of steps the charity has taken since the breachâ.
The IEA said in its complaint to Ofcom that they were victims of a âsmear campaignâ that was âpolitically motivatedâ adding that allegations that they were engaged in lobbying were false.
But after an extensive investigation, LBC and OâBrien have been cleared over the complaint as Ofcom found that the comments made during the show were not distorted or unfair. It found that an invite OâBrien issued to have someone from IEA come on the show served as an effective right of reply â even though it was caveated with the phrase âas long as they tell me who funds themâ. The regulator said a reasonable listener would not take the latter sentence seriously.
The IEA has since issued a statement calling Ofcomâs decision âdeeply disappointingâ, and saying they will consider more legal steps.
âThe regulator has allowed James OâBrien to issue falsehoods about the Institute of Economic Affairs â based on nothing more than conspiracy theories â without any attempt at reasonable fact-checking, or upholding the IEAâs right to reply,â it said.
âThis bizarre ruling will be a boon to conspiracy theorists, and smacks of regulatory incompetence and political bias,â it added.
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