The newspaper veteran David Montgomery will on Thursday revive his long-held criticism of the BBC's encroachment into native news provision when he accuses it of "predatory behaviour" which harms industrial rivals.
Sky News has learnt that Mr Montgomery will use the foreword to the annual outcomes announcement of National World, the London-listed firm he runs, to launch a scathing assault on the company.
Mr Montgomery, whose firm owns titles together with The Scotsman and The Yorkshire Post, has been a staunch critic of the BBC's presence in on-line news, saying in 2019 that its remit wanted to be redefined.
On Thursday, he'll say that National World has been at "the forefront of the campaigning against predatory behaviour by the BBC which uses taxpayer funds to compete online, threatening local independent journalism".
"It is remarkable that the BBC, financed by a compulsory tax, is permitted to enforce its monopoly in the news sector month after month," he'll add in remarks which have been obtained by Sky News.
"In January 2024, 3.1 billion page views for BBC News dwarfed the combined total of the UK's 28 leading independent news sites, including MailOnline, The Sun and, of course, National World.
"In no different sector would such an unfair market be tolerated by regulators."
Mr Montgomery has been pushing for the News Media Association, an trade physique, to take a extra strong place in opposition to the BBC.
Sky News is among the many commercially-owned channels which competes with the BBC within the provision of news throughout totally different media platforms.
National World, which has a market worth of about Β£38m, was among the many potential bidders for The Daily Telegraph, holding talks with monetary backers earlier than an ill-fated deal was struck with the Abu Dhabi-funded funding car RedBird IMI.
Mr Montgomery needs his firm to transition from being a media enterprise with a selected experience in news journalism, to turning into a broader content material supplier throughout media platforms.
The BBC has confronted additional criticism this week from industrial teams over its plans to broadcast promoting as a part of its radio content material.
On Wednesday, Tim Davie, the BBC director-general was requested in regards to the organisation's news technique, rebutting the suggestion that the Corporation was answerable for the declining industrial provision of native news.
"I think some of these things are structural, so if you look at the decline of local print... look at the trend lines there," he advised the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee.
"So I think this is not the BBC causing this issue. And actually, if you look at the amount of journalism we're producing, it's often very, very different or in a different level of coverage to others out in the market."
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