Jackie Long is social affairs editor and presenter for Channel 4 News.
Jackie Long is Channel 4 News Social affairs editor and presenter. She joined the programme in 2011, following more than two decades at the BBC. Most recently she was Correspondent at Newsnight, and she previously worked on The World at One, PM and Five Live.
Gareth Stace, the Director General of UK Steel, was among the industry leaders at the meeting with the business secretary.
We spoke to Jean-Paul Cavalieri, who is the Chief of Mission in Libya for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.
The £20 weekly uplift to universal credit, brought in at the start of the pandemic, will officially be scrapped tomorrow, on the very day Boris Johnson gives his keynote speech to conference.
We spoke to Zoe Billingham from Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary which carries out inspections of police forces in England and Wales. We asked her if the police are failing women and girls.
I spoke to Andrea Simon, the Director for the End Violence Against Women Coalition, and began by asking if she thought that Wayne Couzen’s full-life term meant justice had been done.
It could take more than 10 years to clear the backlog in cancer treatment caused by the pandemic, according to a leading think tank.
We spoke to Rod McKenzie from the Road Haulage Association and began by asking him how critical the situation is right now.
We spoke to Sir Bob Neil, the chair of the Commons Justice committee, about a report by the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman which highlighted a series of failures in the care of the teenager who gave birth at HMP Bronzefield in September 2019.
We spoke to the Shadow Business Secretary Ed Miliband and began by asking him whether it was disingenuous for Labour to suggest they could do anything differently as global gas prices continue to surge.
Multiple failings led to an 18-year-old woman giving birth alone in her cell to a baby which died in Europe’s largest women’s prison, a report has found.
We were joined by the Victims’ Commissioner for England and Wales, Dame Vera Baird, and Sir Peter Fahy, the former chief constable of Greater Manchester Police.
We were joined by Sarah Hardy, from the North Brewing Company, and Mark Rhodes, Professor of Financial Economics at Leeds Beckett University.
Environmentalists have condemned the mass slaughter of almost 1,500 dolphins by hunters in the Faroe Islands.
We speak to Owen Baily, a former gambling addict who is now a peer support worker with the National Problem Gambling Clinic.
As the government prepares to redraw the laws on gambling for the first time in 16 years, families whose lives have been devastated by gambling addiction are fighting for much tougher regulation.