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.
We spoke to Claude-Emmanuel Triomphe, who survived the 2015 Paris terror attack with serious injuries to his chest and leg
More than a million people in the UK fear they will go hungry or be unable to heat their homes, if the government goes ahead with plans to scrap the £20 weekly uplift to universal credit, brought in at the start of the pandemic.
We spoke to Luke Pollard, the MP for the area, and Father Richard Silk, who’s been leading the effort to support people here.
We spoke to the writer Laura Bates, who spent two years researching online misogynistic groups and began by asking her to explain the term “incel”.
Scotland Yard says it will review its decision not to investigate whether the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein committed crimes in London, after one of his accusers lodged a civil case against Prince Andrew in New York. The Met Police Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick said no-one was above the law, but would not be opening…
Jamal Simmons is a political strategist who advised the 2008 Obama/Biden campaign.
At least 65 people have been killed by forest fires raging through northern Algeria. The fires have been burning east of the capital, Algiers, in the Kabyle region.
A £750 million pound insurance scheme to back live events has been announced by the government.
A teenage mother who left her toddler daughter to starve to death has been jailed for nine years.
We talk to journalist and author Kim Ghattas and Human Rights Watch’s crisis and conflict director, Lama Fakih.
He’s a jerk and it’s fine not to like him. The latest series of Jerk, starring the stand-up comedian and actor Tim Renkow begins this week, and is based on a heightened version of his own experience of living with cerebral palsy.
About 100,000 Syrians, out of four million refugees in Turkey, have been allowed temporary rights to visit their homeland during the Eid al-Adha holiday.
We were joined by conservationist and Wildlife Ambassador at Norfolk Wildlife Trust Nick Acheson and Environmental Economist at the University of Cambridge, Dr Matthew Agarwala.
On Friday, the project run by the charity Change Grow Live will close for good.
We spoke to Mark Douglas, who’s head of child services in Bradford, and began by asking what he made of the report.