Summary
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy warns against "sustained attacks" on the BBC as she tells MPs the corporation must "uphold the highest standards"
Shadow culture secretary Nigel Huddleston says there are "too many examples of bias" at the BBC and it requires "institutional change"
It comes as outgoing BBC director general Tim Davie tells staff to "fight for our journalism", a day after US President Donald Trump threatened to sue the corporation for $1bn
In a call with staff alongside BBC chair Samir Shah, Davie acknowledged a "mistake" in how Panorama edited a Trump speech from 6 January 2021, but didn't directly refer to his legal threat
There was some disquiet in the newsroom about that all-staff meeting, BBC culture editor Katie Razzall writes, with a sense some were frustrated with management's answers
Davie and head of news Deborah Turness resigned on Sunday, after days of pressure sparked by a leaked memo written by ex-BBC adviser Michael Prescott - read what it says here