Reporting US Presidents
One-time Washington Correspondent for ITN, Jon Snow, has covered most of the presidential elections since.
154 items found
We spoke to Lib Dems deputy leader Daisy Cooper, who won her St Albans seat with an increased majority.
We’re joined by Sir Charles Walker, who represented Broxbourne for the Tories for almost 20 years.
The Green party and Liberal Democrats have published their manifestos – but both include images that appear not to be located in the UK, such as a hospital in South Africa and a wind farm in the Netherlands, FactCheck has found.
We spoke to the Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili. We started by asking her what happens next if the government overrules her veto of their “foreign influence” bill.
One-time Washington Correspondent for ITN, Jon Snow, has covered most of the presidential elections since.
As the FBI investigates claims that Russian meddling helped Donald Trump become president, FactCheck looks at America’s own track record of interfering with democratic elections.
The two biggest parties increased their share of the vote, and smaller parties were generally squeezed out.
Yesterday, Tom Watson said the Labour Party should be about reforming not replacing capitalism. Today, in a speech much of which could’ve been delivered by Ed Miliband, Jeremy Corbyn sounded a moderate tone.
The Government’s leaflet setting out it’s case for Britain remaining in the EU is a pretty dour production. From next week it goes out to every household in the UK.
Will he last? Senior Blairites (they still exist) say they think he’ll have at least two conferences as leader. But then what?
For so long Burma’s chief dissident, now the leader of a political party, Aung San Suu Kyi strongly denies any complacency against persecution.
The prime minister warns that ministers intending to campaign for Britain to pull out of the European Union will be forced to resign.
David Cameron begins his whistle-stop tour to meet European leaders, as he begins talks on the “substantive” changes he wants ahead of the UK’s referendum on EU membership.
With two more candidates out of the race to replace him, the opposition camp may be less fragmented, but Sepp Blatter’s reign as president of Fifa doesn’t look like coming to an end any time soon.
The next three weeks will see huge jockeying for chairmanships of the increasingly powerful select committees, all of which are up for grabs. Campaigning is already well underway.