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.
With Jackie is Professor John Edmunds from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine – he’s involved with mapping the spread of infectious diseases.
In the UK, Harvey Weinstein’s accusers also welcomed yesterday’s outcome – found guilty of third-degree rape and a first-degree criminal sexual act.
We’re joined from Los Angeles by actress Katherine Kendall, who is one of many women who came forward alleging Harvey Weinstein had sexually harassed or assaulted them .
We spoke to The Times columnist Rachel Sylvester and Peter Cardwell, who was a government adviser for the past three and a half years, until he was sacked last week in the reshuffle.
An independent review has been launched into maternity services at the East Kent NHS Trust – after a number of potentially avoidable baby deaths since 2011.
A bereaved mother has described the “ongoing torture” of seeing her daughter’s murderer released, despite the fact he’s never told police where he left her body.
British couple David and Sally Abel are being quarantined on a cruise ship in Japan, where the deadly coronavirus has now spread to 61 people.
We spoke with Dame Vera Baird who’s the Government commissioner for victims.
Lessons have been learnt – a phrase which has been uttered after every high-profile child sexual exploitation scandal in the last decade.
For 50 years Mrs Salt remained silent about her experiences.
The play, by coincidence, opens at London’s National Theatre on Brexit day.
At least 22 people have been killed and more than a thousand injured, after a powerful earthquake struck eastern Turkey yesterday evening.
I spoke to Ben Kavanagh who is from Ireland, and working as a teacher in Wuhan, and started by asking him what the situation was like in the city.
He’s one of the most successful rap artists in Britain. Stormzy says he one of the best in the world. Wretch 32, also known as Jermaine Scott, is famous for his painstakingly constructed, poetic raps and now in his new book he explains his craft.
Joining me now from New York is Ian Bremmer, the president and founder of political risk research and consulting firm Eurasia Group, and journalist Hiwa Osman from Erbil, Iraq, who served as an adviser to Jalal Talabani – the former president of Iraq.