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HOPE & GLORY

Rule Britannia! petition to reinstate banned lyrics for BBC Proms smashes 30,000 in just two days

A PETITION to reinstate the lyrics of Rule Britannia! and Land of Hope and Glory at the BBC Proms has smashed 30,000 signatures in just two days.

Thousands of Brits called for the words to be sung once more next month, after BBC bosses stripped them from the event's annual programme.

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The petition gained over 30,000 signatures in just two days
Organisers of the BBC Proms have scrapped Rule Britannia! and Land of Hope & Glory lyrics from its programme

Organisers of the BBC Proms said the songs would be featured as orchestral versions instead, due to "offensive" lyrical connotations about the British Empire.

The decision sparked backlash online, with Laurence Fox leading calls to defund the BBC as a result.

Over 30,000 others signed a Change.org petition entitled 'Save Rule Britannia and Land of Hope and Glory from Last Night of the Proms exclusion'.

The petition reads: "If the BBC excludes these songs from The Last Night of the Proms, the lives of patriotic Britons of all colours and creeds will be diminished by this insensitive act of cancellation. 

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Boris weighed in on the row this lunchtime and said Britain should stop being embarrassed of its history

"We believe that patriotic songs matter and we call upon the Director General of the BBC and the head of BBC Music TV Commissioning not to betray our patriotic heritage."

One person commented: "These two songs are probably the highlight of the proms season. The Proms will not be the same without them."

Their view was echoed by the Prime Minister, who said today: "I think it's time we stopped our cringing embarrassment about our history, about our traditions, and about our culture, and we stopped this general fight of self-recrimination and wetness, I wanted to get that off my chest."

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'WHITE GUYS IN A PANIC'

It came as a BBC source described the handling of the Proms line-up as “white guys in a panic,” trying to appease the Black Lives Matter movement.

Piers Morgan called the decision "absolutely pathetic," writing on Twitter: "The BBC needs to grow a pair & stop grovelling to such insane ‘woke’ cancel culture nonsense that most Britons find utterly absurd."

Alok Sharma, the Business Secretary said the Last Night of the Proms brings “a huge amount of pleasure to millions of people” and that if singing is not possible, the BBC should put up subtitles.

Debating the issue on Good Morning Britain, freedom of speech campaigner Inaya Folarin Iman said criticism of the two songs was "absurd", adding that they bring "a lot of people joy and happiness".

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