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’ve been speaking to the US Republican Congressman Mike Waltz, a former US Army green beret who served in Afghanistan.
We spoke to the Afghan MP Farzana Kochai, who’s in the capital Kabul, and asked her first what the situation was like in the city.
We spoke to Education Minister Gillian Keegan and began by asking how much confidence there should be in today’s results.
We were joined by Bilal Sarwary, an Afghan journalist who is currently in the capital Kabul.
It’s been A-level results day for students in England, Northern Ireland and Wales, and despite all the disruption caused by the pandemic, record numbers of them have won top grades.
We spoke to the Afghan politician Fawzia Koofi, who is part of the Afghan delegation in talks with the Taliban in Doha.
Changes to the traffic light system announced by the government today mean that fully vaccinated travellers returning to England and Scotland from France will not have to self-isolate on their return. Speaking to Conservative MP, Henry Smith, we asked him whether the travel changes announced were too late.
We spoke with Professor Michael Mann, from Penn State University, and began by asking him why we were seeing so many extreme weather events happening at the same time?
We spoke to Professor Dame Carol Black who led the independent review of drugs.
In the summer of 1990, more than 350 passengers boarded flight BA149 at Heathrow. The plane was bound for Kuala Lumpur, but never made it that far. Instead it made a refuelling stopover in Kuwait City, just as Iraqi troops invaded in the first Gulf War. The passengers were held for months as “human shields”…
We talk to Franak Viačorka, a senior adviser to the exiled Belarus opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, about the Olympic athlete who is now seeking asylum claiming she fears for her safety.
There’s growing controversy in Scotland over the Crown’s involvement in changing legislation that’s designed to cut carbon emissions.
A new “super committee” of MPs has been set up to examine the government’s Online Safety Bill, which aims to crackdown on online harms such as hate speech and revenge porn by threatening tech companies with huge fines.
We spoke to Simon Watts, the lead coach of the Great Britain mountain bike cross-country team, and began by asking him about the day in late May when Tom Pidcock broke his collar bone in five places.
For the first time in more than 200 years, two masterpieces painted as a pair by the Flemish artist Rubens have been reunited. ‘The Rainbow Landscape’ and ‘A View of Het Steen in the Early Morning’, painted in his twilight years, are sweeping panoramic works showing his home between Brussels and Antwerp as it was…