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Strictly star Thomas Skinner ‘suing BBC for rigging the vote’ as he withdraws from final

Published 10:33 19 Dec 2025 GMT

Updated 11:48 19 Dec 2025 GMT

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Strictly star Thomas Skinner ‘suing BBC for rigging the vote’ as he withdraws from final

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He is boycotting tomorrow’s final

Thomas Skinner is suing the BBC as he claims that it has rigged voting in order to get him quickly off the show.

The former Strictly contestant says that he has proof of BBC downplaying his public support.

Skinner, known for his catchphrase “Bosh”, says that this happened because of his negative publicity.

The ex-Apprentice star, 34, revealed that he is boycotting the final tomorrow.

“The BBC is already facing a £7.5billion lawsuit from Donald Trump – now Thomas, a friend of Vice President JD Vance, is taking them on too”, a source said for The Sun.

However, a BBC spokesperson told The Sun that “Strictly Come Dancing’s ­public vote is robust and independently overseen and verified to ensure complete accuracy.”

In week two of the current series, Skinner was one was the first of 14 celebrities to be ousted.

And Skinner claims to have proof of BBC downplaying his count, even though they never make known to the public how many votes each star received.

Along with results of a public poll, judge’s scores from the first two weeks were added.

BBC announced his combined score meant he and pro Amy Dowden were in the bottom two dance-off, as the pair scored 29 judges’ points over two shows.

The pair faced off against ex-England rugby star Chris Robshaw and pro Nadiya Bychkova, who had 30 points.

“Thomas is adamant he got a larger share of the public vote and believes he has the evidence to prove it”, a source told The Sun.

US Vice President JD Vance got in touch after admiring Thomas’s motivational media posts, and the pair posed together at a barbecue.