Sky News’ Stephen Dixon joins GB News and praises channel for highlighting public’s ‘real concerns’
Sky News star Stephen Dixon joins GB News: Journalist, 47, is latest big move to station after two decades at rival – as he praises channel for highlighting ‘real concerns of Great British public’
Stephen Dixon, 47, is leaving Sky News after 21 years with the news networkHe will host a new channel on GB News, though no details have been announcedHe will join other high-profile talent, including former Sky anchor Colin Brazier
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Sky News presenter Stephen Dixon is leaving to join rival channel GB News, it has today been announced.
The 47-year-old broadcaster, who has been with Sky for 21 years, will team up with his new colleagues at the fledgling channel from next month.
He joins other high-profile talent including former Sky anchor Colin Brazier, ITV News journalist Alastair Stewart, BBC journalist Simon McCoy, former Sky Sports news presenter Kirsty Gallacher, MailOnline columnist Dan Wootton and former Labour MP Gloria De Piero.
GB News say Dixon will present a new programme on the channel, but has yet to formally announce the details.
In a statement, Dixon said: ‘I’m inspired by the energy, fun, and absolute passion at GB News to shed light on the real concerns of the Great British public, wherever they live in the UK.
‘It’s many years since I felt this excited to get to work.’
Sky News star anchor Stephen Dixon is leaving to join rival channel GB News, he has today announced
The 47-year-old broadcaster, who has been with Sky for 21 years, announced the news on Twitter. He will team up with his new colleagues at the fledgling channel from next month
He joins other high-profile talent including former Sky anchor Colin Brazier, ITV News journalist Alastair Stewart, BBC journalist Simon McCoy and and former Labour MP Gloria De Piero. Andrew Neil (pictured centre) left the station earlier this year
Having worked in hospital radio as a teenager, Dixon began his professional career in local radio at the Radio Trent group before joining ITN and ITV as a presenter, senior producer, and bulletin presenter on Five News.
He was later a programme editor on Channel 4’s Big Breakfast News and a presenter on finance channel Simply Money with Angela Rippon.
He presented breakfast programme Sunrise on Sky News for seven years until 2019 alongside Gillian Joseph and Isabel Webster, who also joined GB News earlier this year.
The news comes two months after Andrew Neil stepped down from his roles as the chairman and host of a prime-time show on GB News.
The 72-year-old journalist and broadcaster had been absent from the channel since announcing a break two weeks into its launch and later said he ‘came close to a breakdown’ after suffering from stress due to the station’s technical problems.
Last week he launched an astonishing broadside, saying it was a ‘huge mistake’ for him to become the face of GB News, and branded the channel as a ‘Ukip tribute band’.
He said the channel was still haunted by the ‘shambles’ of its launch and ran the risk of ‘falling into irrelevance and obscurity’.
Speaking at Freeview’s Outside the Box event, he discussed his short time at the channel with interviewer and Sky News‘ Political Editor Beth Rigby.
Referring to his brief stint with GB News, he said: ‘The big mistake I made, and it was a huge mistake, and it did cause pain and aggravation, was that I put my name and face on the tin and yet quickly discovered that I really had no say in what was going into that tin.’
Neil said he was in ‘no rush’ to return to television but that he did not want GB News to be ‘the full stop in my broadcast career’.
He said his two main issues with GB News were its production values and ideological stance, citing Nigel Farage being given a nightly show months after launch.
‘My fundamental mistake was to get into bed with people who I thought shared my vision, but didn’t actually,’ he said.
‘What made it very stressful and very difficult was that in the public domain, understandably and quite rightly, it was Andrew Neil’s GB News, it was Andrew Neil’s channel, that was the brand of it.
‘And yet it was doing things … that were not me.’
‘It became apparent to me as the months of this year went on that a combination of the board and the founding members, that this was basically a Ukip tribute band, and that’s what they really wanted.’
The presenter, who was also chairman at GB news, said he still believed that there was in Britain still a gap in the market for a ‘centre right’ news alternative, without the need to drift towards ‘Fox News to the right’.
However, he said that the BBC under Director-General Tim Davie was right to put impartiality at the heart of its news coverage.
Asked whether he would return to the BBC having held discussions with Mr Davie, Neil said that while no roles are immediately available at the broadcaster, the door remains open.
While he likely held political beliefs to the right of most BBC journalists, he said he would ‘leave those at the studio door’ and give politicians from all sides of the spectrum and ‘equal opportunity thumping.’
Neil also criticised ‘mainstream’ UK news channels for – in his eyes – failing to challenge stories that appeal to more ‘liberal’ sensibilities of journalists and editors.
Alistair Stewart (pictured left) has been one of the main presenters on GB News since its launch, while Simon McCoy (pictured right), who joined from the BBC presents the channel’s breakfast show
Former Sky Sports presenter Kirsty Gallacher is already part of the GB News team, along with former Labour MP Gloria De Piero
The news comes two months after Andrew Neil (pictured) stepped down from his roles as the chairman and host of a prime-time show on GB News
‘We’re no longer journalists, we’ve become the PR department of Greenpeace,’ Neil said, specifically of the coverage of COP26 summit in Glasgow in recent weeks.
In September, figures published by Broadcast found GB News had lost 60 per cent of its audience since launching in June.
The ratings analysis firm said it was currently watched by an average of 21,000 TV viewers, or 0.3 per cent of the total audience, between 6am and 2am.
It averaged 50,000 viewers across its first week in July, narrowly behind Sky News (57,000) and well behind BBC News (103,000).
But GB News has pointed to the success of its online brand, saying it had gained more than 1.75million online users since launching earlier this year, while its viewing figures were on the rise.