Don't be silly.
President Trump's legal team sent a cease-and-desist letter on November 9, 2025, demanding a full retraction, apology, and damages by November 14, 2025, or face a defamation lawsuit. The claim alleges the edit was "malicious, disparaging, and inflammatory," designed to interfere in the 2024 election by portraying Trump as responsible for the Capitol riot.
The BBC has stated it will review and respond directly.
If filed in a U.S. court, the case would proceed as a defamation suit under American civil law, where it is rare for public figures to prevail in defamation actions.
Contrast this with UK civil law (governed by the Defamation Act 2013 for England and Wales): The burden flips, with the defendant (the BBC) needing to prove truth, honest opinion, or public interest, making it plaintiff-friendly. Claimants win about 70-80% of libel trials, per historical data. No constitutional free speech override exists; instead, the Human Rights Act 1998 balances Article 10 (expression) against reputational harm, but courts often prioritize the latter. Procedure is more judge-led and inquisitorial.
In summary, U.S. law shields the BBC with speech protections, capping Trump's leverage at a potential settlement; UK law exposes it.