Growing trend to alter British history without ‘due process’ report warns

Victoria and Albert and Science Museum bosses back Trevor Phillips report that found tearing down statues and renaming streets is altering history ‘without due process’ and decision makers should stand up to ‘partisan’ pressure groups

The Policy Exchange think tank released the paper written by Trevor PhillipsThe report claims there is a ‘growing trend to alter history without due process’Three museums have backed the paper including Victoria and Albert Museum



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Three of Britain’s best-known museums have backed a new report criticising the ‘altering of history’ though tearing down of statues, renaming of streets, and the changing of school curriculum without a ‘rigorous and non-partisan approach’,

Victoria and Albert Museum chairman Nicholas Coleridge, Sir Ian Blatchford, the director of the Science Museum, and Dr Samir Shah, chairman of the Museum of the Home supported the paper written by broadcaster Trevor Phillips.

It warned of a ‘growing trend to alter public history and heritage without due process’.

The report argues decision-makers give pressure groups and activists too much of a say, but institutions should ‘pay due regard to the views and sentiments of those who support them’, including donors, members, volunteers and taxpayers’ and alumni in the case of schools and universities.

It said any choices being made over ‘re-interpreting the past’ should be fully transparent, while any changes must be lawful.

Mr Coleridge said the recommendations were ‘practical, rigorous and above all sensible’.

He said: ‘I am certain any board or institution would do well to study them carefully instead of arriving at some drastically hasty, prejudiced and wrongheaded decision.’

Sir Ian added it was a ‘resoundingly reasonable guide to achieving change that is thoughtful and sustainable, rather than anxious and panicked’.

Trevor Phillips (pictured) claimed in his report that there was a ‘growing trend to alter public history and heritage without due process’

The statue of former British prime minister Winston Churchill, defaced with the words (Churchill) ‘was a racist’ after a demonstration outside the US Embassy, on June 7, 2020

A senior Government source called Mr Phillips’ report ‘an important and thoughtful contribution to the debate around our shared history, which we will be examining closely’.

They added: ‘Too many institutions are rushing to please a vocal minority when it comes to changing history.

‘Instead, they should follow due process, the law, and pay attention to the concerns of the majority, including museum visitors, the taxpayer and other important stakeholders.’

The report, which has been submitted to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, said: ‘Decisions about change should not unduly be influenced by what may be temporary shifts in public sentiment or taste.’

And that ‘overwhelming support’ for change should be provable, whether that is changes to a school motto or the removal of a public statue.

It also warned: ‘Public institutions can ultimately be held to account by the relevant Secretary of State.’

It comes after Conservative Party chairman Oliver Dowden warned Government-funded organisations that ‘if they go too woke, they risk going broke’.

At a Conservative Party conference fringe event at the start of October, he was challenged by one activist about his culture war and ‘anti-woke rhetoric’ but Mr Dowden insisted his interventions were not ‘reactionary’.

Protesters throw statue of slave trader Edward Colston into Bristol harbour during a Black Lives Matter protest rally

Mr Dowden warned that some cultural organisations were ‘responding too much to this noisy and aggressive brigade of activists’ who criticised aspects of British history. 

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