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BBC Parliament

BBC Parliament
BBC Parliament Logo
Launched 1992; 25 years ago (1992) (as The Parliamentary Channel)
Owned by BBC
Picture format 576i (16:9 SDTV)
Audience share 0.05% (September 2015 (2015-09), BARB)
Formerly called The Parliamentary Channel (1992–1998)
Sister channel(s) BBC One
BBC Two
BBC Four
BBC News
CBBC
CBeebies
Website bbc.co.uk/parliament
Availability
Terrestrial
Freeview Channel 131
Satellite
Freesat Channel 201
Sky (UK only) Channel 504
Astra 2E 10788 V 22000 5/6
Cable
Virgin Media Channel 605
WightFibre Channel 26
Streaming media
BBC iPlayer Watch live (UK only)
TVPlayer Watch live (UK only)

BBC Parliament is a British television channel which broadcasts live and recorded coverage of the House of Commons, House of Lords and Select Committees of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, the Scottish Parliament, the London Assembly, the Northern Ireland Assembly and the Welsh Assembly. The channel also broadcasts reports from the European Parliament and the annual conferences of the main political parties and the Trades Union Congress. On average, 1.2% of the UK's total population watch the channel for more than three minutes at least once per week; these viewers watch for an average of just over two hours each over the course of the week. On 14 October 2016, the channel received a new look and new idents, its first revamp since 2009.

Before being taken over by the BBC, the channel was known as the Parliamentary Channel, operated by United Artists Cable and funded by a consortium of British cable operators. The Parliamentary Channel launched as a cable-exclusive channel in 1992. The channel was purchased by the BBC in 1998, retitled BBC Parliament and relaunched on 23 September 1998. It now broadcasts on cable, satellite, and Freeview.

The channel ran as an audio service via DAB from launch until 14 November 2000.

Due to capacity limitations on the digital terrestrial television platform, now known as Freeview, from launch until 30 October 2002, the channel ran as "audio only". Then on Freeview from October 2002 until 13 November 2006 the channel was only able to broadcast a quarter-screen picture. After receiving "thousands of angry and perplexed emails and letters", not to mention questions asked by MPs in the House itself, the BBC eventually found the bandwidth to make the channel full-screen.


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