Donald Trump has doubled down on this threat he made to sue the BBC for the way it edited a section of his speech that he gave on January 6th in 2021.
The edit of that speech was part of a panorama documentary that came out before the election in October of last year.
This is what Donald Trump has now told Laura Ingram on Fox News This Week.
But tonight you are saying to our viewers that you will go forward and file a defamation lawsuit against the BBC.
I think I have an obligation to do it because you can't get people,
you can't allow people to do that.
So the BBC says it has seen the legal letter from President Trump's people and that it's going to respond directly in due course,
that's to quote the BBC.
But the question now is, how exactly will the BBC respond?
How strong a case does the President have against the BBC when it comes to an issue like defamation?
And what can happen if the BBC decides to take him on in court?
We're going to try and answer all of those questions and lots more on today's episode.
Welcome to America's.
America's America cast from BBC News when Donald Trump calls they say yes sir right away sir happy to lick your boot sir we are the sickest country in the world oh dear are you worried that billionaires are going to go hungry of course the president supports peaceful protest what a stupid question are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein Hello,
it's Anthony at the BBC Bureau in Washington, DC.
And it is Marianna in the worldwide headquarters in London.
All right.
In a little bit, we're going to be talking to a friend of the podcast,
CNN senior legal analyst, Ellie Honig.
He has covered a lot of Donald Trump's legal cases,