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The BBC is currently grappling with a new controversy following the unexpected dismissal of one of its top radio personalities.
Scott Mills, the host of Radio 2’s Breakfast Show, was abruptly removed from the airwaves last Tuesday, and his contract has since been terminated due to issues concerning his ‘personal conduct’.
The allegations against the 53-year-old broadcaster reportedly stem from incidents dating back to his tenure at Radio 1, with claims suggesting these involve a ‘historic relationship’.
Mills, one of the BBC’s highest-earning stars with an annual salary reaching up to £360,000, has left Radio 2 in disarray, insiders revealed to the Daily Mail. Colleagues are reportedly in shock, and management is urgently seeking a replacement.
The Daily Mirror reported last night that the decision to dismiss Mills followed a 2016 police investigation into ‘serious sexual offences’ involving a teenage boy.
The newspaper stated that Mills was questioned at the time, but the case was eventually dropped due to insufficient evidence. It is alleged that his recent firing is connected to the same individual.
Mills is the latest in a string of stars to lose their jobs at the scandal-ridden BBC. His ousting follows the exit of news anchor Huw Edwards, along with MasterChef pair Gregg Wallace and John Torode, in the past two years.
It is believed the unceremonious firing, announced with a curt public statement yesterday morning, was one of the last acts of director-general Tim Davie, who wanted to ‘clear the decks’ before leaving his post on Thursday.
Mr Davie, who himself resigned after it emerged that footage of a speech made by US President Donald Trump had been edited and spliced together in an episode of Panorama, wanted one last roll of the dice, an insider said.
Radio 2 Breakfast Show host Scott Mills, pictured in November, was hauled off air last Tuesday and his contract has now been terminated over his ‘personal conduct’
It is believed the unceremonious firing, announced with a curt public statement yesterday morning, was one of the last acts of director-general Tim Davie, pictured in November
Mills took over the flagship breakfast show from Zoe Ball in 2025. The allegations against Mills are thought to date back a decade to his time on Radio 1
But he will be leaving interim director-general Rhodri Talfan Davies, and permanent replacement Matt Brittin, with a major headache as the race is on to find a replacement for Mills or risk losing listeners.
The biggest breakfast show in the country currently brings in a weekly audience of some 6.5million, after listeners lost under Mills’ predecessor Zoe Ball returned.
Mills’ team are said to be taking legal advice in the wake of his sacking.
Last night, a Metropolitan Police spokesman said: ‘In December 2016, the Met began an investigation following a referral from another police force. The investigation related to allegations of serious sexual offences against a teenage boy. These were reported to taken place between 1997 and 2000.
‘As part of these inquiries, a man who was in his 40s at the time of the interview, was questioned by police under caution in July 2018.
‘A full file of evidence was submitted to the Crown Prosecution Service, who determined the evidential threshold had not been met to bring charges. Following this advice, the investigation was closed in May 2019.’
A representative for Mills declined to comment when approached by the Daily Mail.
In an internal note to staff yesterday morning, Lorna Clarke, the Corporation’s director of music, said: ‘I wanted to personally let you know that Scott Mills has left the Breakfast Show, and the BBC. I know that this news will be sudden and unexpected and therefore must come as a shock.
‘Not least as so many of us have worked with Scott over a great many years, across a broad range of our programmes on Radio 1, Radio 5 Live, Radio 2 and TV. I felt it was important to share this news with you at the earliest opportunity.’
She said it would ‘come as a shock to our audience and loyal breakfast show listeners too’ as she promised to update everyone with ‘more information on plans for the show when I’m able to’.
She added: ‘While I appreciate many of you will have questions, I hope you can understand that I am not going to be saying anything further now.’
In a statement, the BBC said: ‘While we do not comment on matters relating to individuals, we can confirm Scott Mills is no longer contracted to work with the BBC.’
Mills pictured this month. The DJ’s dismissal has left colleagues and listeners shocked
Mills married his long-term partner Sam Vaughan at a celebrity-studded wedding in Barcelona in 2024. They are pictured with their dog
Mills’ final show aired last Tuesday – following his presenting stint on BBC’s Comic Relief the previous Friday – and he signed off by telling listeners: ‘See you tomorrow.’ Just six days later, Mills was gone from the job.
‘People are walking around crying,’ said one BBC employee. ‘The BBC has taken this very seriously.’
Mills landed the coveted Radio 2 Breakfast Show role in January last year when he took over from Ms Ball.
But it was at the more free-wheeling Radio 1, aimed at a younger demographic, where Mills made his name, rising through the ranks from the early breakfast show in 1998 to the afternoon slot vacated by Sara Cox in 2004.
Renamed The Scott Mills Show, it ran from 2004 until 2022, when Mills jumped ship to Radio 2, where he replaced Steve Wright on his afternoon slot.
Now married to long-term partner Sam Vaughan, 36, Mills enjoyed a hedonistic lifestyle during his 24-year tenure at Radio 1.
‘This relates back to the culture at Radio 1, not at Radio 2,’ the BBC source told the Mail of the allegation made against Mills. Radio 2 presenter Jeremy Vine said he’d been unaware of his colleague’s departure until just minutes before he went on air yesterday.
‘I had not heard anything about it until 17 minutes ago, when it was on the BBC website, and I only had the information that was given to you in the bulletin,’ he told listeners to his own show after the 12pm news led with the sacking.
‘I have nothing more [to say than] it was allegations about Scott Mills’ personal conduct which have led to him being sacked.’
BBC news correspondent Sima Kotecha told how ‘gasps filled the newsroom’ when the news was announced to staff.
‘This is mega news. We heard gasps in the newsroom when people realised that he had been sacked… The fact that the bosses had to do this means there must be something potentially very significant here to let one of their big names go. As I said, this is a huge name in the BBC.’
It was during his two decades at Radio 1 that Southampton-born Mills struggled with alcohol and suffered from anxiety and depression. His spiral was prompted by the death of his boyfriend from a drug overdose in 2001.
He credited BBC bosses for standing by him and even admitted that he should have been ‘sacked’ due to his behaviour.
‘I was 26 [when he died] and we spent every minute together, it was truly awful,’ he said in 2012.
‘[I’d] wake up at 2.30am, do the show, come home and go back to sleep. Then I’d wake up in the evening and drink two bottles of wine or a bottle of spirits in front of the TV. It was a way to escape.’
Mills said that ‘even I would’ve sacked me’, adding: ‘Thank God for Radio 1.’
In recent years, Mills has found stability with husband Sam, whom he met in 2016. The couple appeared together on, and won, BBC’s reality show Celebrity Race Across the World in 2024. They got married in Barcelona shortly after filming. Mills was one of the BBC’s Eurovision commentators and, in 2022, raised £1million for the charity Children in Need by spending 24 hours on a treadmill.
Mills pictured in 2016. He landed the coveted Radio 2 Breakfast Show role in January last year when he took over from Ms Ball
The popular presenter, who has suffered from chronic anxiety, depression and panic attacks all his life, revealed how he derailed in 2001 when his boyfriend Mitch died from a drug overdose
The former Radio 2 DJ admitted in recent years he had been branching out into TV projects outside of his ‘natural environment’ including Bake Off, pictured
Mills pictured with Emily Atack at his house in 2012. He explained how he regretted participating in some of the shows he had appeared on
Mills’ exit comes in the same week as Mr Davie’s departure from the Corporation, with the BBC’s director of nations Mr Davies stepping in as interim chief.
Former Google executive Mr Brittin, who spent 18 years with the tech giant, will take over the top job on May 18. The beleaguered BBC is still dealing with the fallout of the Huw Edwards scandal, with renewed focus on the convicted sex offender thanks to Channel 5’s recent documentary-drama starring Martin Clunes.
Edwards was suspended on full pay from the Corporation while an internal investigation was carried out and before he quit the job.
He was later given a six-month suspended jail sentence for possessing child abuse images.