Jon Snow has been the face of Channel 4 News since 1989.
Jon Snow joined ITN in 1976 and became Washington Correspondent in 1984. Since then, he has travelled the world to cover the news – from the fall of the Berlin Wall and the release of Nelson Mandela, to Barack Obama's inauguration and the earthquake in Haiti.
His many awards include the Richard Dimbleby Bafta award for Best Factual Contribution to Television (2005), and Royal Television Society awards for Journalist of the Year (2006) and Presenter of the Year (2009).
We spoke to two Labour Party MPs; Labour’s Shadow Business Minister Barry Gardiner, and Melanie Onn who has been on the campaign trail in her constituency in Grimbsy.
Emily Proffitt is a primary school head in the West Midlands, who also represents the National Association of Head Teachers, and Mark Lehain is the founder and former principal of a free school in Bedfordshire.
Conservative MP Alistair Burt, a former Foreign Office Minister, and Karin von Hippel, director general at the Royal United Services Institute, discuss the new al-Baghdadi video.
We’re joined by Anna Taylor, Executive Director of the Food Foundation, Nadim Zahawi MP, Government Minister for Children and the Labour MP, a and Emma Lewell-Buck who’s helped secure legislation to record the number of households judged to be in food poverty.
‘No Collusion, No Obstruction’, President Trump declared again on social media today as he dismissed the political fallout from the publication of the Mueller report.
Jackie Alemany is a political reporter at the Washington Post.
We spoke to Education Minister Nick Gibb and asked him if, with teachers, parents and children complaining about the pressure, it is the right time to review SATS tests.
The novelist Ian McEwan has tackled big subjects from climate change to the Iraq war in his work, and he’s a passionate Remain campaigner. But his new novel ‘Machines Like Me’ is more concerned with artificial intelligence than Brexit.
Jon Snow speaks to Jacob Rees-Mogg.
Jon Snow talks to Conservative MP Ken Clarke.
In June it will be 75 years since the D-Day landings. As part of the commemorations in Normandy, one 92-year-old Londoner will be given France’s highest military order of merit for her role in the communications HQ that co-ordinated the invasion to liberate western Europe from the Nazis.
Prisons Minister Rory Stewart discusses Brexit.
Sir Simon Fraser who was a senior civil servant, rising to become the head of the Diplomatic Service; and Julian Jessop, an economist who worked at the Treasury and also at the free market think tank, the Institute of Economica Affairs.
Margot James is the government Minister for Digital and the Creative Industries.
We’re joined in Dublin by Irish Senator Neale Richmond from the governing Fine Gael party.