Jennie Bond
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Age | 74 |
Date of birth | August 19,1950 |
Zodiac sign | Leo |
Born | Hitchin |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | James Keltz |
Children | Emma Natasha |
Emma Natasha Keltz | |
Books | Elizabeth: Fifty Glorious Years |
Siblings | Annette Hector |
Susan Cannon | |
Height | 163 (cm) |
Movies/Shows | Cash in the Attic |
Blackadder: Back & Forth | |
Great British Menu | |
Rip Off Britain | |
Cash in the Celebrity Attic | |
Notabl credit | BBC News |
royal correspondent | |
The Great British Menu | |
Cash in the Attic | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 415115 |
Jennie Bond Life story
Jennifer Bond is an English journalist and television presenter. Bond worked for fourteen years as the BBC's royal correspondent. She has most recently hosted Cash in the Attic and narrated the programme Great British Menu.
Jill Dando: Murdered BBC presenter was 'just in wrong place at wrong time'
... It offers detailed first-hand accounts from her family, friends and journalists - including BBC colleague Jennie Bond, who was " cold with shock" before breaking the news of her death to viewers - as well as police chiefs and lawyers who covered the case...
Harry and Meghan's Netflix trailers criticised over 'misleading' clips
... On Tuesday, veteran royal correspondent Jennie Bond after ITV host Lorraine Kelly described the use of the images and footage as " bizarre"...
Will government do more sooner on cost of living?
... The Prince of Wales was deputising and, as former royal correspondent Jennie Bond put it beautifully, he was walking in his future...
Prince Andrew 'bulldozed' his way into BBC Newsnight interview
... Former BBC royal correspondent Jennie Bond said the interview reminded her of one where she spilled her soul ...
Will government do more sooner on cost of living?
The Queen 's absence from an occasion grounded in near timeless ritual and ceremony felt profound.
The Prince of Wales was deputising and, as former royal correspondent Jennie Bond put it beautifully, he was walking in his future.
But remember, The State Opening of Parliament, for all its colour, is a shopping list delivered from a throne.
It is A Collection of proposed new laws that the government plans (or hopes) to get round to in The Next year or so.
It isn't - and it can't be - a Budget.
And that is the very thing that Labour is clamouring for, an " emergency Budget" as they call it.
So after The Ceremony in The Morning , the politics in the afternoon fell into the broadly familiar tram tracks of recent political debate.
A chorus of consistency from the opposition parties, arguing the government must do more, and ministers arguing they have done quite a bit already, and there will be more to come.
There is an awareness in government of the potential plunge over The Next year or so towards recession.
Already, prices are spiralling and the prospect is they will spiral further.
And the recent economic context shapes the political debate now.
Pandemic pressuresCovid prompted a government intervention in the economy, with ideas such as furlough, that was so big you could see it from Space - Hundreds of billions of pounds of Life Support at a time where The Fear of depression, not merely recession, stalked Whitehall.
Such a recent and colossal crutch propping up the economy has created a precedent and a comparator, Against Which support now can be seen as puny.
As ministers wrestle with the financial consequences of the pandemic, there is a bill of £80bn a year in interest payments on The National debt.
They draw a parallel with pandemic - how the economic crunch will require the same " ingenuity and compassion. "
But the Prime Minister adds that " no country is immune" from what he sees as the economic aftershocks of Covid and The War in Ukraine.
And crucially, he adds: " No government can realistically shield everyone from the impact. "
That is very different to the messaging.
Covid yardstickFew would suggest the government's intervention could or should be on the scale of a once in a century pandemic.
But the yardstick Against Which any help can be very recently compared makes it harder for ministers to look like they get the scale of the current squeeze for so many.
The big question is whether, having suggested they will do more in the autumn, they'll feel compelled to do more much sooner.
Source of news: bbc.com