Sky News Australia has apologized for interviewing Blair Cottrell after a televised interview with him triggered a widespread backlash, the BBC wrote.
Cottrell, the former leader of the anti-immigration group United Patriots Front, spoke with Sky News host Adam Giles to voice his views on immigration.
His statements invited an angry backlash from the audience, with viewers calling in to say that last year, Cottrell was convicted of inciting contempt of Muslims, and that he had previously called for schools to display pictures of Adolf Hitler.
Other presenters at the network were equally incensed by Cottrell’s comments.
"Blair Cottrell is a far right-wing fascist who's a self-confessed Hitler fan. He's boasted about using 'violence and terror' to manipulate women," TV host Laura Jayes wrote on Twitter.
A regular commentator and former Australian government minister, Craig Emerson, slammed the interview as “another step in a journey to normalizing racism and bigotry in our country" and said he would not appear on the network again.
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Faced with the angry backlash, Sky News director Greg Byrnes wrote that “it was wrong to have Blair Cottrell on Sky News Australia. His views do not reflect ours,” adding that the interview had been removed from repeat timeslots and online platforms.
Blair Cottrell has complained that Sky News Australia had succumbed to pressure to "silence" him.