Ciaran Jenkins is the Data Correspondent and Presenter for Channel 4 News based in the Leeds newsroom.
He covers a wide range of stories, from home and social affairs to sport and technology. He has reported exclusively for Channel 4 News on international phone hacking scams and police racism.
Ciaran joined Channel 4 News in 2012 from the BBC, where he had specialised in politics and then education. During his time at the BBC he broke a series of exclusives on bogus academics and visa fraud, for which he won a number of awards.
British households face average energy bills surging above £5,000 next year, according to the latest forecast by the energy consultancy Auxilione.
They’re the first students in the UK to get the results of traditional examinations since the summer of 2019.
Normally you’d expect the biggest single hike in interest rates for 27 years would make the biggest headline.
His crowning achievement was a consensus on peace in Northern Ireland.
As Boris Johnson’s days in office tick down, there are questions about what his government’s flagship levelling up policy will mean under a new prime minister.
We spoke to Matthew Hollingworth, emergency coordinator and Ukraine Director at the World Food Programme, and asked him how it feels to see grain leave Ukraine after all this time.
An independent review into Scottish cricket says that it’s uncovered 448 examples of institutional racism.
It’s not just the candidates to be the next Prime Minister who are slugging it out for the votes of the Conservative Party members.
Ciaran Jenkins has been talking to one of the handful of doctors who are providing terminations, who says their work feels more like a backstreet operation.
One of the many challenges facing whoever becomes the next prime minister is the Scottish Government’s insistence on a vote on independence.
We hear from the Scottish Government’s Cabinet Secretary for the Constitution, External Affairs and Culture, Angus Robertson, on Nicola Sturgeon’s plans for a second independence referendum.
We were joined from Edinburgh by Maree Todd, the minister for women’s health in the Scottish government.
We were joined by Caroline Goodwin QC, who was the chair of the Criminal Bar Association in 2019 and 2020 and is head of criminal practice at Trinity Chambers.
Women have been rushing to make appointments at abortion clinics in states across America before they shut their doors for good, after the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the constitutional right to an abortion.
In Kigali, Prince Charles and Boris Johnson met this week for a cup of tea and a catch up. It was their first meeting since reports claimed that the Prince had privately described plans to deport asylum seekers to the country as “appalling”.