US President Donald Trump has filed a five-billion-dollar defamation lawsuit over an edited version of his January 2021 speech. He submitted the case in Florida and accused the UK public broadcaster of defamation and breaches of trade practices law, according to court filings. The organisation had apologised for the edit last month but rejected compensation demands and denied any legal basis for defamation.
Trump’s legal team claimed editors deliberately and maliciously altered his words. The lawsuit argued the changes deceptively reshaped the speech to damage his reputation. The broadcaster has not yet responded publicly to the lawsuit itself.
Lawsuit follows documentary broadcast before election
Trump announced his intention to sue last month after the documentary aired in the United Kingdom. The programme appeared ahead of the 2024 US presidential election and examined events linked to 6 January 2021. Trump told reporters he felt forced to act and accused the broadcaster of changing the words he spoke.
He said the edit misrepresented his intentions and misled viewers. Trump argued the programme crossed a legal line by altering the meaning of his remarks.
Edited speech becomes central issue
Trump delivered the speech on 6 January 2021 before unrest later erupted at the US Capitol. He told supporters they would walk to the Capitol and cheer on senators and members of Congress. More than fifty minutes later, he used the phrase “we fight like hell” during a separate part of the address.
The documentary combined those remarks into a single continuous clip. The edit showed Trump saying he would go to the Capitol, be there with supporters, and fight like hell. Trump argued the sequence falsely suggested he called for violence.
Admission of error and leadership resignations
The broadcaster later acknowledged the edit created a mistaken impression of a direct call for violent action. It still rejected claims that the programme amounted to defamation. In November, a leaked internal memo sharply criticised how editors handled the speech.
The controversy triggered the resignations of director general Tim Davie and head of news Deborah Turness. The memo highlighted serious concerns about editorial judgment and oversight.
Defence claims and distribution dispute
Before Trump filed the lawsuit, lawyers for the broadcaster issued a detailed response. They denied any malicious intent and argued the programme caused no harm, noting Trump later secured re-election. They also said the organisation did not distribute the documentary in the United States.
The lawyers stated the programme never aired on US channels and remained restricted to UK viewers on a domestic streaming platform. They argued those limits prevented significant exposure among American audiences.
Access allegations and political reaction
Trump’s lawsuit disputed that position by citing agreements with external distributors. He referred to a deal with a third-party media company that allegedly held rights to show the documentary outside the UK. Neither party has responded publicly to those claims.
The filing also argued Florida residents may have accessed the programme through VPN services or the streaming platform BritBox. It cited increased VPN usage in Florida after the broadcast as evidence of likely access.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey criticised Trump’s decision to sue and urged the prime minister to intervene. He said Keir Starmer must defend the public broadcaster and protect licence fee payers from financial risk. He described the legal threat as unacceptable and outrageous.
