Richard Sharp has resigned as chairman of the BBC in the wake of a report into his appointment following a cronyism row.
Mr Sharp said the report found he had breached the government’s code for the public appointments but said it was “inadvertent”.
The matter has been a “distraction” for the BBC and he has therefore this morning resigned as the BBC chair.
He said he will stay on until a replacement is found.
“To chair this incredible organisation has been an honour,” he added.
He had been caught up in a row over his appointment into the role at the BBC since January, when it was revealed he helped facilitate an £800,000 loan guarantee for Boris Johnson – just weeks before the former prime minister appointed Mr Sharp.
An investigation into Mr Sharp’s appointment by the commissioner for public appointments was announced the same month, only for the commissioner, William Shawcross, to recuse himself from the process due to “contact” between himself and the BBC chairman.
Barrister Adam Heppinstall KC took over the probe.
Rishi Sunak – who used to work for Mr Sharp at Goldman Sachs – previously declined to respond to questions about their relationship or Mr Sharp’s integrity.
He told reporters: “Richard Sharp went through an independent appointments process at the time that I had nothing to do with – he was appointed before I was prime minister.
“But also the chair of public appointments has asked a leading KC to review – to re-review – that appointments process so there is not much I can say more that’s ongoing, but it’s right that process concludes.”
Mr Sharp faced renewed scrutiny after the backlash against the BBC’s decision to take Match of the Day presenter Gary Lineker off air for his tweets over the government’s immigration policy. Critics questioned Mr Sharp’s impartiality, in the context of the row about Lineker’s views.