From the fact-checkers

The "Retained EU Law" bill will not stop TV Viewers in the UK from having the right to watch the Olympics for free.

During Prime Minister’s Questions on 19 October, Labour MP Stella Creasy claimed that the Retained EU Law Bill — proposed legislation which would see some EU laws that were carried over after Brexit expire at the end of 2023 — would abolish the “right to watch the Olympics free of charge”.

The Olympic Games are a “listed event” — that is, a sporting event deemed to be of “national interest” for which the broadcast rights must be offered to free-to-air terrestrial broadcasters (like the BBC, ITV and Channel 4).

However, the UK’s listed events framework originates in domestic law, not EU law.

A spokesperson for the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport told Full Fact: “The Retained EU Law Bill will not abolish people's rights to watch the Olympics free of charge. The listed events regime is set out in UK domestic legislation and will not change.

"We fully support the listed events regime and will ensure it continues to deliver its objectives in our Broadcasting White Paper.”

Source: Full Fact - you can read their report at

Retained EU Law Bill won’t end the right to watch the Olympics for free - Full Fact

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