Ofcom announced on Monday it had found the American news channel in breach of impartiality rules in both its 'Tucker Carlson Tonight' and 'Hannity' programs.
Sky, which is partly owned by US media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, halted the broadcast of the channel in the UK in August, with some suggesting it was part of an attempt to push through a deal to buy the whole of Sky, rather than an editorial based decision.
Ofcom, however, has pursued complaints received before the channel ceased its UK broadcasts.
In regards to Tucker Carlson Tonight, the regulator found that the program had featured various critical statements about the British government and police officers in the aftermath of the Manchester Arena bombing that killed 22 in May.
They included "accusations that particular individuals and public bodies had done nothing to: counter terrorism; stop radicalization; protect citizens from terrorism; or protect 'thousands of underage girls' from rape and abuse."
The program, according to Ofcom, failed to offer the view of those being criticized, "which we would have expected given the nature and amount of criticism of them in the program."
About Hannity, the regulator said video clips featuring public figures who had shown opposition to US President Donald Trump's travel ban were constantly "dismissed or ridiculed."
"The program didn't include a sufficiently wide range of views, and any alternative opinions put forward during the discussion were dismissed by the presenter," an Ofcom spokesman said.
Comment: Translation: these programs published offending material that runs counter to the Official Narrative, therefore we are clamping down on the proliferation of such material.
The ruling comes just as the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) evaluates the viability and fairness of the Murdoch-owned 21st Century Fox closing a £15 billion ($19.7 billion) deal for the complete takeover of Sky.
Another Murdoch owned media outlet, the Times newspaper, has repeatedly condemned RT when it has fallen foul of Ofcom.
The broadsheet, dubbed by some as "the Establishment paper," has repeatedly attacked the channel after it was sanctioned.
Most recently, the Times published a story on how Labour MP Tom Watson called on Ofcom to carry out an investigation into RT's advertisements on the London Underground to see if they breach impartiality rules.
This sparked accusations by former Labour MP George Galloway that the Times is "leading the charge to take down RT."
"The Times is owned by a billionaire American citizen [Rupert Murdoch] who controls more than 40 percent of the British media market, and they'd like to keep it that way," Galloway told RT.
"The fact that RT is making great strides in attracting viewers and participants from all parts of the political spectrum is what is really getting under their skin."
It is yet to be seen whether the Times will condemn Fox in the same manner.




Comment: If impartiality is really what Ofcom has a problem with, they might as well and censor and censure the whole of UK media!
It isn't enough that Murdoch already practically owns Fox and Sky - any transgressions by either network must be punished. Murdoch must then lean on his managers, who in turn lean on Carlson and Hannity.
This is precisely the power-game the Kremlin is accused of running with respect to RT, yet we see that over there, staff say whatever they like, even criticizing official Russian positions or interests.
We've been saying how anti-Russian hysteria will lead to the West's fall, and now we're witnessing how the power-brokers are beginning to turn on one another in big ways.