Kirsty Wark will step down as lead Newsnight presenter after election

Kirsty Wark will step down as lead Newsnight presenter after the next election, BBC reveals

  • The corporation said the 68-year-old will continue to present BBC shows 

Kirsty Wark will step down as a lead presenter of Newsnight after the next election, the BBC has announced.

The corporation said the 68-year-old will continue to present BBC shows including The Reunion, Start The Week on Radio 4, as well as documentaries.

Wark said: ‘Today I am celebrating 30 years presenting Newsnight.

‘It is an enormous privilege to be involved in such a rigorous, creative programme with a wonderful, talented, bunch of colleagues – actually many bunches over the years, led, most recently by Esme Wren, followed by Stewart Maclean.

‘There’s not a day when I don’t look forward to coming to the office, and every day I learn something from the team about all manner of things, from aspects of American foreign policy to how to make a great mojito.

Kirsty Wark said: ‘Last year I spoke to both to the director-general Tim Davie and to Stewart and signalled my desire to end my three-decade run on the show after the next election, and that’s the plan’

‘Last year I spoke to both to the director-general Tim Davie and to Stewart and signalled my desire to end my three-decade run on the show after the next election, and that’s the plan.

‘When the time comes it will be a massive wrench.

‘However, I’ll be leaving Newsnight but not the BBC. I’ll still be presenting The Reunion and Start The Week on Radio 4, TV documentaries too, as well as finishing, finally, my third novel.

‘There are exciting times ahead.’

Wark is the longest-serving presenter of the show, according to the BBC, having started in 1993.

The Scottish television presenter has reported on eight prime ministers along with interviewing arts figures such as the playwright Harold Pinter in 2006.

Wark conducted an interview with Lord Macpherson following his inquiry into the murder of Stephen Lawrence, and in America interviewed victims of Cleveland kidnapper Ariel Castro.

The corporation said the 68-year-old will continue to present BBC shows including The Reunion, Start The Week on Radio 4, as well as documentaries

She also reported and presented from Scotland after the 1996 Dunblane massacre, when gunman Thomas Hamilton shot dead 16 children and their teacher in the village primary school before turning the gun on himself.

BBC director-general Tim Davie thanked Wark after she announced she would be stepping down as lead Newsnight presenter after the next election.

In a statement published by the BBC, he said: ‘Generations of Newsnight viewers have benefitted from Kirsty’s authority, her razor-sharp insight and her journalistic flair.

‘She sets the standard for engaging yet authoritative presenting. I speak on behalf of the whole BBC when I thank her for the past 30 years.

‘I’m delighted the BBC is not losing Kirsty altogether when she steps back from Newsnight, and look forward to seeing and hearing her beyond the busy political year ahead.’

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