LBC presenter Maajid Nawaz has declared that he will “refuse to go quietly into the night”, after the broadcaster announced that he was leaving the radio station “with immediate effect”.
The 44-year-old’s contract had been due to expire “very shortly”, and following discussions with Mr Nawaz, he “will no longer present a show on LBC”, the broadcaster said in a statement on Friday.
While the station thanked Mr Nawaz “for the contribution he has made to LBC and [wished] him well”, the presenter struck a more defiant tone, writing on Twitter: “I refuse to go quietly into the night.”
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In something of a rebuttal to LBC’s statement, Mr Nawaz said that he had been scheduled to appear on the station the following day, he “did not quit”, and his contract was set to expire in April 2022, adding: “Make of that what you will.”
Appealing to his followers to become a paid subscriber to his Substack newsletter, he added: “I have a wife and child to support and my show was our family’s only source of income.”
Mr Nawaz had in recent weeks been criticised by fellow LBC presenter Iain Dale, who accused him of spreading “deranged rubbish” regarding coronavirus vaccines.
Responding to a Twitter post on 13 December in which Mr Nawaz wrote that mass vaccination during a pandemic with a jab not tested for long-term side-effects “could be doing more harm than good”, Mr Dale said: “Enough. What we do know already is that it’s dangerously irresponsible to tweet this kind of deranged rubbish.
“What it is designed to do is to sow seeds of doubt in people’s minds. What is more dangerous is not to have the jabs. Given you’ve had them, why do [you] tweet this garbage?”
Mr Nawaz later claimed his detractors were “unable to respond to any of the substance or points raised” except for calling him “dangerous”. He suggested that he was indeed dangerous “to fascism”, adding: “And We Are Coming”, followed by a Union Jack emoji.
And after Mr Nawaz claimed he would reject a booster dose “in solidarity with the unvaccinated”, Mr Dale tweeted: “In 11 years on LBC I have never publicly called out a fellow presenter. But I can’t stand by while this sort of irresponsible and dangerous propaganda is spread by someone who ought to know better.”
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The station declined to comment when asked by The Independent whether any discomfort among colleagues at Mr Nawaz’s recent output on social media had been a factor in his departure. The Press Gazette reported that the station’s management had faced internal and external pressure to take action over his tweets.