BBC faces dilemma as anti-Thatcher song tops chart

photo John Lydon as performs in 2007 with The Sex Pistols at the Roxy in West Hollywood, Calif. A 70-year-old song is giving the BBC a headache, as it decides whether to play "Ding Dong! The Witch is Dead" - a song from the "Wizard of Oz" being driven up the charts by opponents of Margaret Thatcher as a mocking memorial to the late prime minister. The Sex Pistol song "God Save the Queen" was banned by the BBC.

England's BBC is in a bind after opponents of Margaret Thatcher pushed the song "Ding Dong! The Witch is Dead" to the top of the charts in posthumous protest over the late British leader's divisive policies.

The online campaign to drive the "Wizard of Oz" song to the No. 1 spot on the U.K. singles chart was launched by Thatcher critics shortly after the former prime minister died Monday of a stroke at age 87.

Many say the campaign - which aims to see the song played this weekend on the BBC's Official Chart Show - is in bad taste. Some have called on the BBC to promise it won't broadcast the song.

John Whittingdale, a lawmaker from Thatcher's Conservative party, told the Daily Mail tabloid that many would find the ditty "deeply insensitive."

"This is an attempt to manipulate the charts by people trying to make a political point," he said.

In a statement, the BBC said it had not yet made any decision on whether it would feature the song on its show - which normally plays all the week's best-selling hits.

"The Official Chart Show on Sunday is a historical and factual account of what the British public has been buying and we will make a decision about playing it when the final chart positions are clear," the taxpayer-funded BBC said.

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